
Last year, an odd and slow-moving flame lit the night sky from California to Texas, but its identity is still unknown.
The stunning ball of light that Rebecca Woods ‘ home stanza in San Marco, near San Diego, captured images of a glowing neck as it slowly passes through the sky. Woods first thought it might be a Starlink start due to the path, but no launch were scheduled.
The American Meteor Society received 34 information of the fire incident on July 25 from California, Mexico, and Texas. The blazing light game is seen quietly moving across the sky in films and photos on the organization’s website.
Eric Sandquist, a teacher and head of San Diego State’s Astronomy Department, believes the thing was Asian space debris. In this Mexican media account, the item appears to be the same. He told NBC 7 that it is thought to have been a Asian booster rocket launched in 2010.
The fireball’s west-to-east path supports the idea that it was an orbiting thing re-entering Earth’s environment, and its sluggish speed suggests it was not a fireball.
The subject was reportedly spotted breaking asunder by a see from New Mexico. The event was not connected to Comic Con, which took place in San Diego last weekend, according to San Diego officers.