Credit & Copyright: Night Sky Live Collaboration
Explanation:
What in heavens-above was that?
Not everything seen on the night sky is understood.
The Night Sky Live
(NSL) project keeps its global array of continuously
updating web cameras (CONCAMs) always watching the night sky.
On the night of 2004 December 17, the
fisheye
CONCAM perched on top of an
active volcano in
Haleakala,
Hawaii,
saw something moving across the night sky that remains mysterious.
The NSL team might have disregard the above streak as unconfirmed,
but the Mauna Kea CONCAM
on the next Hawaiian island recorded the
same thing.
The NSL team might then have disregard the streak as a satellite,
but no record of it was found in the
heavens-above.com
site that usually documents bright satellite events.
If you think you have a
reasonable explanation for the streak,
please contribute to the on-line discussion.
Current candidates include a known satellite that was
somehow missed by
heavens-above,
a recently launched rocket, and a
passing space rock.
Volunteers are solicited by the NSL project to help
monitor the operability of each NSL CONCAM,
including looking for
interesting anomalies such as this.
Disclosure: Robert Nemiroff collaborates on both the
NSL and
APOD projects.
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NASA Web Site Statements, Warnings, and Disclaimers
NASA Official: Jay Norris. Specific rights apply.
A service of: LHEA at NASA / GSFC
& Michigan Tech. U.
Based on Astronomy Picture
Of the Day
Publications with keywords: Hawaii - mystery object - night sky
Publications with words: Hawaii - mystery object - night sky
See also:
- APOD: 2024 September 11 Á A Night Sky over the Tatra Mountains
- APOD: 2023 August 15 Á A Triply Glowing Night Sky over Iceland
- Sunset to Sunrise over the Baltic Sea
- An Artful Sky over Lofoten Islands
- A Furious Sky over Mount Shasta
- Sea and Sky Glows over the Oregon Coast
- Stars and Planets over Portugal