A fireball that travelled across the sky and triggered a series of bright flashes seen from Cape Reinga to areas south of Auckland was likely caused by a meteor entering the Earth鈥檚 atmosphere, a Northland astronomer says.
The Facebook community group Kait膩ia Noticeboard was buzzing on Tuesday with reports and even some shaky video clips of a mysterious light in the sky around 11pm on Monday.
It was variously described as 鈥渁 really big bright flash鈥, a fireball lasting three to four seconds, and two bright flashes like lightning 鈥 but with no thunder and from a clear sky.
One person said it lit up his home near Cape Reinga, while another was treated to the 鈥渟pectacular sight鈥 while packing up after a spot of night fishing.
Kristin Hartley, of Panguru in north Hokianga, said the light came from the northwest, roughly over Ahipara, and was bright enough to light up the sky.
鈥淚t was a huge ball of orange that appeared in the sky all of a sudden. Then it was gone, and you could see bits coming off it and taking different paths.鈥
Hartley woke up her partner, but he just mumbled 鈥渢he aliens are coming鈥 and went back to sleep.
鈥淚t was very bright. The sky was so clear it couldn鈥檛 have been lightning. I wondered what it was,鈥 she said.
Peter Felhofer, director of Whangarei鈥檚 Planetarium North, said the witnesses鈥 descriptions, especially the flashes of light, suggested it was a meteor.
A meteor even the size of a fist would heat up intensely as it entered the Earth鈥檚 atmosphere, creating a flash lasting up to a few seconds before eventually detonating.
The colour, typically green or orange, was determined by the surface gases and the meteor鈥檚 mineral composition.
A green meteor caught on camera over Nelson in 2022. Photo / Greg Price
Felhofer said he hadn鈥檛 yet received any reports of Monday night鈥檚 meteor, but a group of keen astronomers was about to start searching for the remnants of a large meteorite seen over Dargaville in November.
A meteorite is a meteor that reaches the Earth鈥檚 surface instead of burning up in the atmosphere.
The group had been able to work out roughly where the fragments had landed, using photographs captured on the night, estimates of the meteorite鈥檚 size and records of the wind conditions at the time.
The search would begin on February 11.
Planetarium North had just acquired a specialised fireball camera which could be used for tracing future meteorites, he said.
Felhofer urged anyone who had seen an unusually bright meteor to report it at听听so researchers could try to recover the meteorite.
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