Close X
Tuesday, October 22, 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

    Montreal: Advocates Want Animals Removed From Quebec Fur Farm, But Government To Keep Watch

    Montreal: Advocates Want Animals Removed From Quebec Fur Farm, But Government To Keep Watch
    MONTREAL - Animal welfare advocates are calling for the immediate removal of foxes and minks they say are being housed in inhumane conditions south of Montreal.

    Montreal: Advocates Want Animals Removed From Quebec Fur Farm, But Government To Keep Watch

    Ski resort company Whistler Blackcomb has Q3 loss on higher revenues

    Ski resort company Whistler Blackcomb has Q3 loss on higher revenues
    Whistler Blackcomb Holdings Inc. (TSX:WB) narrowed its third-quarter loss to $10.2 million and increased its revenues, noting the recent ski season had challenging conditions.

    Ski resort company Whistler Blackcomb has Q3 loss on higher revenues

    China Creek wildfire won't be tamed, flames chew through Houston, B.C., forests

    China Creek wildfire won't be tamed, flames chew through Houston, B.C., forests
    An aggressive wildfire blazing in the north-central Interior between Houston, B.C., and Burns Lake is just five days old but has already charred a huge swath of bush, prompting expanded evacuation orders and alerts.

    China Creek wildfire won't be tamed, flames chew through Houston, B.C., forests

    Whoops! Make that 42,000 July jobs, not 200, Statcan says in corrected report

    Whoops! Make that 42,000 July jobs, not 200, Statcan says in corrected report
    The once-stellar reputation of Statistics Canada took a huge hit Friday with the release of a correction to one of its flagship reports.

    Whoops! Make that 42,000 July jobs, not 200, Statcan says in corrected report

    OmniTrax backs away from controversial plan to ship crude oil through Hudson Bay

    OmniTrax backs away from controversial plan to ship crude oil through Hudson Bay
    A rail company is putting the brakes on a controversial plan to haul millions of litres of crude oil across its northern rail line to the port of Churchill on Hudson Bay.

    OmniTrax backs away from controversial plan to ship crude oil through Hudson Bay

    Mayor Rob Ford's handling of bomb threat violated city policy: union

    Mayor Rob Ford's handling of bomb threat violated city policy: union
    The union representing Toronto city hall employees says Mayor Rob Ford's decision to report a bomb threat to the media violated city policy, putting workers at risk.

    Mayor Rob Ford's handling of bomb threat violated city policy: union