BUENOS AIRES - The phenomenon of a meteor or shooting star was recently seen in the night sky Argentina. Portable cameras owned by local residents to record sightings of the meteor and upload it to a video sharing site, YouTube.
Reported Techeblog, Sunday (02/08/2015), meteor recorded by the camera appears for 10 seconds. In the video, the meteor appears a steady green light and streaked across the night sky.
Several witnesses to record the incident and shared on social media. Objects can be seen in the sky over the city of Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Reports said, the object of which is called the 'shooting star' was shot from the Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil and neighboring Uruguay.
Francisco Diego, Senior Researcher at the Department of Physics and Astronomy, University College London said that the solar system has a lot of debris and space rock. When the Earth was met with such objects, the space rock will burn, resulting in the phenomenon of falling stars.
For the size of a large rock, called 'fireballs' or fireball. In addition to the space rocks, there are also thousands of pieces of rockets, satellites and other parents in low-Earth orbit.
Such objects are usually burned in the atmosphere of Earth. Francisco reveals, there is nothing to fear from the phenomenon, despite the fact that meteorites could fall to Earth and create damage.
Reported Techeblog, Sunday (02/08/2015), meteor recorded by the camera appears for 10 seconds. In the video, the meteor appears a steady green light and streaked across the night sky.
Several witnesses to record the incident and shared on social media. Objects can be seen in the sky over the city of Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Reports said, the object of which is called the 'shooting star' was shot from the Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil and neighboring Uruguay.
Francisco Diego, Senior Researcher at the Department of Physics and Astronomy, University College London said that the solar system has a lot of debris and space rock. When the Earth was met with such objects, the space rock will burn, resulting in the phenomenon of falling stars.
For the size of a large rock, called 'fireballs' or fireball. In addition to the space rocks, there are also thousands of pieces of rockets, satellites and other parents in low-Earth orbit.
Such objects are usually burned in the atmosphere of Earth. Francisco reveals, there is nothing to fear from the phenomenon, despite the fact that meteorites could fall to Earth and create damage.