Close X
Wednesday, October 9, 2024
ADVT 
National

Great balls of fire! Flash across Calgary night sky turns out to be rocket body

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Feb, 2015 10:36 AM

    CALGARY — A Calgary photographer who captured a fireball streaking across the night sky says he thought he'd witnessed a plane crashing or a meteor breaking up.

    But Neil Zeller says NASA says it was a rocket body returning to Earth after a Chinese satellite launch in December.

    Zeller was photographing the northern lights west of Calgary around 11 p.m. on Monday when he caught a flash out of the corner of his eye.

    He swung his camera around and was able to get four, long-exposure shots as the unusual light streaked across the sky.

    Zeller says it was a "one in a million" experience and a bit of a fluke that he was able to get the photos at all.

    He credits the brightness of the aurora borealis Monday night.

    “A lot of times a bright object in a dark sky will overexpose. You’ll just get a beam of light," he said. "For me to get the individual streaks of light, the individual parts that were burning up in the sky, it was basically a factor of how bright the auroras were.”

    Zeller explained why the initial sighting was confusing.

    “I thought it might have been a plane crashing, just because it was in so many pieces and it was such a big ball," he said. "(But) it didn’t appear to be falling. It just kept going across the sky.

    "So then I thought maybe a large meteor was breaking up, but it was just way too slow.”

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ottawa projects $1.9B surplus for 2015

    Ottawa projects $1.9B surplus for 2015
    OTTAWA - Next year's federal budget surplus will be $1.9 billion, the Finance Department says — $4.5 billion less than expected, thanks in large part to the Harper government's multibillion-dollar cost-cutting proposals for families.

    Ottawa projects $1.9B surplus for 2015

    Canada's spy agency needs 'certainty' on overseas terror tracking, feds argue

    Canada's spy agency needs 'certainty' on overseas terror tracking, feds argue
    OTTAWA — The Canadian Security Intelligence Service has been left in the dark about the legality of tracking Canadian terror suspects overseas, the federal government is telling the Supreme Court.

    Canada's spy agency needs 'certainty' on overseas terror tracking, feds argue

    Family MDs Group Pushes Ottawa For Home-care Strategy, Plan To End Child Poverty By 2020

    Family MDs Group Pushes Ottawa For Home-care Strategy, Plan To End Child Poverty By 2020
    TORONTO — Canada's family doctors are calling on the federal government to develop a national home-care strategy for seniors and improved health care for young people, including the elimination of child poverty by 2020.

    Family MDs Group Pushes Ottawa For Home-care Strategy, Plan To End Child Poverty By 2020

    $1.9B surplus for 2015, trimmed by $4.5B thanks to Conservative family measures

    $1.9B surplus for 2015, trimmed by $4.5B thanks to Conservative family measures
    OTTAWA — Next year's federal budget surplus will be $1.9 billion, the Finance Department says — $4.5 billion less than expected, thanks in large part to the Harper government's multibillion-dollar cost-cutting proposals for families.

    $1.9B surplus for 2015, trimmed by $4.5B thanks to Conservative family measures

    Kevin Vickers feted at international security conference in Israel

    Kevin Vickers feted at international security conference in Israel
    JERUSALEM — The House of Commons' sergeant-at-arms is getting celebrity treatment at an international security conference in Israel.

    Kevin Vickers feted at international security conference in Israel

    Manitoba Premier Greg Selinger has 'advantage' in leadership vote: analyst

    Manitoba Premier Greg Selinger has 'advantage' in leadership vote: analyst
    WINNIPEG — Manitoba Premier Greg Selinger appears intent on staying in office while he runs for his job again — something one analyst says gives him a big advantage over competitors.

    Manitoba Premier Greg Selinger has 'advantage' in leadership vote: analyst