KEY POINTS

  • A fireball event was spotted near the U.S. Virgin Islands
  • The fireball's brightness illuminated its surroundings
  • The meteor fragmented before disappearing 

A security camera captured the moment when the brightness of a meteor’s fireball event turned night into day. Based on eyewitness reports, the remarkable incident happened near the U.S. Virgin Islands.

The latest fireball event was reported by the American Meteor Society (AMS). According to the organization, a total of seven eyewitness reports were filed through its website regarding the incident.

Many of the eyewitness reports were submitted by residents of the islands, Saint John, Saint Thomas Pointe-à-Pitre Grande-Terreand. The reports indicated that the fireball event occurred on April 27 at 12:40 a.m. UTC (April 26 at 8:40 p.m. EDT).

As noted by the eyewitnesses, the meteor that appeared over the islands was very bright. Many of them stated its magnitude ranged from -4 to -27, indicating that it was brighter than Venus, which is the third brightest object in the sky.

The reports stated that the meteor’s fireball was visible for about 1.5 to 3.5 seconds. It also displayed different colors as it streaked across the sky. According to eyewitnesses, the object displayed yellowish and greenish glows.

Although the exact image of the falling meteor was not caught by cameras, an eyewitness from Saint John shared a short video that shows the brightness of the fireball. In the 9-second video uploaded by eyewitness Erich Wellemeyer, it can be seen how the meteor's brightness illuminated the dark sky.

For a split-second, night turned into day as the meteor flew over the region. It was so bright that it turned parts of the sky blue and even revealed some of the clouds in the sky.

One of the eyewitnesses noted that the fireball appeared to have broken apart as it left a trail in the sky. Unfortunately, the fragments from the meteor were not bright enough to be clearly spotted from the ground.

As noted by the AMS, fireball events often end up fragmenting after going through the atmosphere.

“A fireball is another term for a very bright meteor, generally brighter than magnitude -4, which is about the same magnitude of the planet Venus as seen in the morning or evening sky,” the organization explained. “A bolide is a special type of fireball which explodes in a bright terminal flash at its end, often with visible fragmentation.”

Meteor
Pictured: This image taken with a meteorite tracking device developed by George Varros, shows a meteorite as it enters Earth's atmosphere during the Leonid meteor shower November 19, 2002. Getty Images/George Varros and Dr. Peter Jenniskens/NASA