Astronomers are desperate to track down the remnants of the meteor, which was witnessed from the North of Scotland to the South of England as it entered the Earth's atmosphere at about 9.40pm on Saturday. Orange with a green tail, it is thought to have travelled at up to 90,000mph and been somewhere between a football and a family car in size. Read more
It should be noted that the vintage OPS 8386 satellite has a 98.07° orbit and was visible from the UK around 30 minutes after the reported fireball sighting (using the latest orbital data). It is not predicted to re-enter until the 10th March, 2012.
Background information Meteors become visible between about 65 to 120 kilometres above the Earth. They disintegrate at altitudes of 50 to 95 kilometres. Meteors have roughly a fifty percent chance of a daylight (or near daylight) collision with the Earth. Most meteors are, however, observed at night, when darkness allows fainter objects to be recognised. Source
There is a remote possibility that it was as big as a house and that it skipped on top of the atmosphere and flew off into space. But more likely, it was very small, and is now at the bottom of the English channel. But, it is still too early to say for sure. There didn't seem to be any explosions, or disintegration, of the meteor - so that might mean it was quite dense (say iron); and that lessened the likelihood that pieces could be found along the flight path.
There is an online impact calculator to see what affects it would have if it were really large and did land...
Yes that looks like it. Thanks. It would be interesting to find out what happened to it. I feel lucky to have seenit. It was sheer luck. I often stand outside to look for shooting stars and only ever see them out of the corner of my eye. This certainly made up for it :0)
"Judging by its brightness, it may have been large enough to survive and hit the ground but until people work out its trajectory we wont have any idea where it might have come down" - Dr David Whitehouse, author and astronomer.
Adrian West of Meteorwatch said he spotted the fireball in Berkshire and believed it could have gone down in the English Channel or the Bay of Biscay. Author and astronomer Dr David Whitehouse said it may have been large enough to survive and hit the ground. Read more
Ed ~ Just saying you saw a meteor gives me a rough idea in which country it might have landed in... ;)
The ground track seems to indicate a ~173° flight path, with an (as yet) unknown entry angle (but probably less than 30°). This, with the slow speed, the lack of any sonic booms or noise may indicate two possible scenarios; that it was a relatively small 'popty ping' sized rock that burned up over the English channel, or intriguingly, that it was very big, high and shallow, and skipped back out into space.
(Based on information from Berkshire, Manchester area, Bradwell, 2 webcam locations, and importantly from Forfar)