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Video captured a brilliant fireball lighting up the Australian sky. And NASA confirmed it was a meteor the size of a small car. - Business Insider

australia meteor cctvCCTV footage from the South Australia Police Department shows the moment a meteor lit up the night sky.Screenshot/Twitter

  • A NASA research center confirmed that a massive fireball landed on Tuesday in the Great Australian Bight just off the coast of South Australia. 
  • People in parts of Victoria and South Australia reported seeing large flashes of bright white light at around 10:30 pm on Tuesday.
  • The Center for Near-Earth Object Studies in California confirmed that the bright light was actually an impressive fireball with a calculated impact energy of 1.6 kilotons of explosive power.
  • Visit INSIDER's homepage for more stories.

A NASA research center confirmed that a massive fireball landed on Tuesday in the Great Australian Bight just off the coast of South Australia.

The Center for Near-Earth Object Studies at the California Institute of Technology analyzes the impact time, location, and amount of energy generated by meteors and asteroids that approach earth. The research facility uses high-precision orbit solutions of the space objects to predict the risk of impact and supports NASA's Planetary Defense Coordination Office

US government sensors have been monitoring fireballs — or "exceptionally bright meteors," as NASA explains — since 1988. The chart below from the research center maps the location and impact energy of the brightest fireballs reported. 

nasa meteor map A map of all fireballs reported by US Government sensors since 1988.Centre for Near-Earth Objects Studies

fireballFireball seen on Thursday night.NASA

People in parts of Victoria and South Australia reported seeing large flashes of bright white light at around 10:30 pm local time on Tuesday.

Read more: SpaceX just unleashed its first 60 Starlink high-speed internet satellites and recorded a 'weird' video of the maneuver

The center confirmed that the bright light was actually an impressive fireball with a calculated impact energy of 1.6 kilotons of explosive power. It traveled at a velocity of 11.5 kilometers per second (7 miles per second) and ultimately landed in the Great Australian Bight just off South Australia's coast. 

NASA engineer Dr Steve Chesley told ABC Radio that the meteor could have been the size of a small car when it hit the atmosphere, and it was actually traveling at a slower speed than most asteroids. 

Check out video captured by the South Australia Police Department which shows the exact moment the meteor lit up the night sky: 

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https://www.businessinsider.com/nasa-map-confirms-bright-meteor-landed-off-south-australia-coast-2019-5

2019-05-24 06:51:35Z
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