|   | 
Credit: Howard Edin   
(Oklahoma City Astronomy Club)   
   
   
Explanation:
On September 30, a spectacular bolide   
or fireball meteor surprised   
a group of amateur astronomers enjoying dark night skies over   
the Oklahoma panhandle's Black Mesa State Park in the Midwestern US.   
   
Flashing past familiar constellations Taurus (top) and Orion,   
the extremely bright meteor was captured by a hillside camera   
overlooking the 2008   
Okie-Tex Star Party.   
   
Astronomy enthusiast Howard Edin reports that he was looking in the   
opposite direction at the time, but saw the whole observing   
field light up and at first thought someone had turned on their car   
headlights.   
   
So far   
the sighting of a such a bright   
bolide meteor,   
produced as a space rock is vaporized hurtling through Earth's atmosphere,   
really is   
a matter of luck.   
   
But that could change.   
   
Earlier   
this week the discovery and follow-up tracking of   
tiny asteroid   
2008 TC3 allowed astronomers to predict the time   
and location of its impact with the atmosphere.   
   
While no ground-based sightings of the fireball seem to have been   
reported, this first ever impact prediction was confirmed   
by at least some detections of an air burst and bright flash on   
October 7th over northern Sudan.   
   
    
   
   
   
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Based on Astronomy Picture
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Publications with keywords: bolid - meteor
Publications with words: bolid - meteor
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