A bright green light prompted hundreds of people from Wisconsin, Illinois, Michigan and Iowa to light up online bulletin boards on Wednesday night with rave reviews of a shooting star. Dan Joyce, an astronomer at Triton College in River Grove, Ill., and a member of the Chicago Astronomical Society, had a large telescope loaded in the back of his Mazda and was headed to the Green River Conservation Area with a fellow stargazing enthusiast when the meteor burned through the darkness for 10 or more glorious seconds. Read more
'Intense' meteor dazzles stargazers across Midwest
Dan Joyce was headed west with a buddy and a big telescope, hoping to take advantage of the "beautiful night" when a slash of brilliant green shot across the evening horizon. Read more
Meteor was size of basketball doing about 36,000 mph
The meteor that blazed across the sky in the Chicago area Wednesday night was probably about the size of a basketball and moving about 36,000 mph, according to a NASA scientist who said they are not all that uncommon. Bill Cooke, head of NASA's Meteoroid Environment Office, said a fireball as bright as the one that hundreds of people from Illinois, Wisconsin, Michigan and Iowa reported seeing in the sky Wednesday night occurs about once a month. At this time of year, in fact, bright fireballs, though not as bright as the one seen Wednesday, occur every few days, he said. Read more