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Meteor over Macon, Ga., on the evening of May 20, 2011.
It was tracked by two NASA all sky cameras, one located in Chickamauga, Ga., and the other at the Tellus Science Museum in the town of Cartersville, Ga. Analysis of the video data from these cameras enabled the Meteoroid Environment Office to estimate the trajectory, speed, mass and orbit of the meteor. More information on these cameras and a log of recent meteor events can be found at: http://fireballs.ndc.nasa.gov.
The video shows four distinct flares caused by the meteor breaking apart in its fiery final few seconds. You can see fragments coming off in the meteor’s wake after three of these flares. After a last burst of light, the meteor ablated — or “burned up” — 38 miles above the town of Villa Rica, Ga., located on the border between Carrol and Douglas counties in Georgia.
Contacts and sources:
Janet Anderson
NASA Marshall Space Flight Center, Ala.
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