Fireball over SoCal on October 16th, 2021

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More than 115 reports from 4 states

The American Meteor Society (AMS) received more than 115 reports so far about a fireball event that occurred over Southern California on October 16th just past 8:45 PM PDT (October 17th, 03:45 Universal Time). The AMS #2021-6638 event was mainly seen from California, but was also visible from Arizona, Nevada and Utah.

If you witnessed this event and/or if you have a video or a photo of this event, please
Submit an Official Fireball Report

If you want to learn more about Fireballs: read our Fireball FAQ.

Trajectory

The computer generated trajectory from the list of current witnesses, indicates a path just north east of San Bernadino, CA. Constrained by information from 3 publicly accessible cameras in the region, these reports enabled NASA to establish that the fireball was first sighted at an altitude of 51 miles (82km) above the Mojave Trails National Monument. It moved to the northwest at 47,000 miles per hour (75,600 km/h) finally disintegrating 32 miles (51km) above the California town of Yermo, just east of Barstow. Taking 3.8 seconds to burn up, the meteor managed to travel 47 miles (75km) through the upper atmosphere; its peak brightness was between that of a quarter and full Moon.

Eye witness Sandy Vernona Munoz from shared a video of the event with us:

Fireball, Bolide?

Several thousand meteors of fireball magnitude occur in the Earth’s atmosphere each day. The vast majority of these, however, occur over the oceans and uninhabited regions, and a good many are masked by daylight. Those that occur at night also stand little chance of being detected due to the relatively low numbers of persons out to notice them.

Additionally, the brighter the fireball, the more rare is the event. As a general thumb rule, there are only about 1/3 as many fireballs present for each successively brighter magnitude class, following an exponential decrease. Experienced observers can expect to see only about 1 fireball of magnitude -6 or better for every 200 hours of meteor observing, while a fireball of magnitude -4 can be expected about once every 20 hours or so.

AMS TERMINOLOGY

4 comments

  • Brian Crawford 3 years ago

    I saw this fireball from Palm Springs. It appeared near the zenith and travelled north for several seconds before fading at around 60 degrees. It was quite bright and blue-white.

    Reply to Brian
  • René Moore 3 years ago

    I saw this fireball at the Big Sting fundraiser event at Watson Lake near Prescott, AZ. Awesome to witness this very bright and beautiful light for several seconds.

    Reply to René
  • Gordon roberts 3 years ago

    We were in Death Valley out looking at the stars – saw a brilliant white/blue ball moving fast for about 3 seconds – incredible.

    Reply to Gordon
  • Jose Aguirre 3 years ago

    I habe photos of a green meteor Oct 16th 2022.
    I was on a beach trip,and aproximately at 6 am, I was looking at the sunrise with my fiancee.
    By pire lick I had my phone with me. Green light lasted about 15-20 seconds and as I started taking photos without aiming( trying not to loss the moment,Inmanage to capture a photo that whennis enlarged,shows the meteor as if it was a green comet…

    Reply to Jose

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