Thursday 11 May 2023

Video - Unknown Burning Objects Spotted Over Japan's Okinawa

Video - Unknown Burning Objects Spotted Over Japan's Okinawa

Video - Unknown Burning Objects Spotted Over Japan's Okinawa




©Twitter/Mary McIntyre FRAS






Burning objects of unknown origin were spotted in the sky over Japan's Okinawa island on Wednesday night, the US broadcaster reported.







According to the report, the objects were spotted around 8.30 p.m. local time (11:30 GMT). A posted video shows at least two burning objects slowly moving in the sky.


The Weathernews portal reported that the trajectory of the objects was different from a comet, and the fiery tail was longer than that of a meteor.





Mysterious balls of fire have been spotted in the sky over Japan’s Okinawa prefecture moving east. On this subject informed Kyodo News.


An employee of the Ishigaki branch of the National Astronomical Observatory told the Japan Times that the objects that streaked across the sky were most likely rocket debris. “The slow speed and the way the light moved – the strings of lights moving in parallel – looked exactly like rocket debris falling through the atmosphere,” the source explained.


He added that it could be a Chinese missile launched in November. Reportedly, parts of it may have returned to the atmosphere as fireballs were seen in the sky.


The observatory employee noted that the wreckage had probably fallen into the ocean and presented no danger.




On the evening of April 19, a bright flash appeared in the sky over Kyiv, local residents heard an explosion. The military administration said a NASA satellite fell to Earth, but the US space agency denied it. Later, the International Meteor Organization reported that the flash over Kyiv was caused by a fireball.







Strange fireball-like objects were seen flying over Japan’s Okinawa Prefecture on Wednesday night, according to local news reports, with several eyewitnesses taking to social media to share clips of the spectacle.


A video captured by an NHK reporter around 8:30pm local time shows the objects blazing through the sky near Naha City in Japan’s southernmost region. The journalist said they were “surprised” by the sighting, noting “At first, I thought they were fireworks, but I didn't hear any sound and they moved in a straight line.”




The Ishigakijima Astronomical Observatory, located in Ishigaki City on the Okinawa island chain, later confirmed that it spotted a “streak of light” in the sky north of the facility at 8:33pm on Wednesday.


A number of locals also filmed the fireballs and uploaded the footage online, with one video created by the Ryukyu Shimpo newspaper compiling a series of clips shared by residents. On social media, some observers speculated the lights were pieces of a meteor or shooting stars.


However, while the objects have yet to be identified definitively, the Ishigakijima observatory offered a plausible explanation, noting that debris from a Chinese rocket launched last November was expected to re-enter Earth’s atmosphere on the night of May 10. The observatory predicted the space junk would “pass directly over the main island of Okinawa,” or just north of it, NHK added.


“Fireballs and meteorites can be expected to hit the Earth vertically or obliquely, but debris from satellites and rockets are orbiting the Earth,” the observatory said. “So it's possible that [the debris] will look like this because it's going to slowly plunge in, near parallel to the Earth, and burn up over a long period of time.”


The Eta Aquarid meteor shower is also in progress – active this year between April 15 and May 27 – however the event’s peak already passed last week, when about five meteors were expected to be visible in the skies over Tokyo. It is unclear whether the shower would still be perceptible from Okinawa at its current stage.





















No comments: