Fireball Meteor Seen From Space: ISS Astronaut Shares Incredible Footage of Shooting Star

The best view of Earth always belongs to the handful of astronauts aboard the International Space Station, a five-bed, two-bath, million pound orbiting laboratory that circles the planet at about five miles per second. That's a good way to get a lot of site-seeing squeezed into your free time, and fortunately for those of us stuck here on Earth, astronauts tend to be fairly generous sharing the view.

Like this view, a time-lapse captured by Italian astronaut Paolo Nespoli:

And here a closer look! Make a wish... I already did 😉 // E qui visto da più vicino! Esprimete un desiderio... Io l'ho già fatto 😉 #VITAmission pic.twitter.com/H0q5f8hUG9

— Paolo Nespoli (@astro_paolo) November 16, 2017

Nespoli posted this gif on November 16, a close-up view of time-lapse footage he'd gathered on November 5 and shared with the European Space Agency ground team that supports his work up in space. At the time, he and his colleagues had been traveling on a path from the southern Atlantic Ocean to Kazakhstan.

What he caught was likely a bright meteor falling to Earth off the coast of South Africa. Simply seeing a shooting star from the space station, Nespoli says for the benefits of us Earthlings, isn't that unusual, but he was excited he was finally able to catch one on screen.

And his ESA colleagues set to work on the meteor as well, which appears about seven seconds into the video on the right-hand side of the screen. Detlef Koschny, who studies meteors and their kin, told the agency in a statement that it looks to be about as bright as Venus. That is scientists' cut-off for rating meteors as "fireballs," so this one got the official stamp of approval.

He added that it's not coming in at the right sort of angle to be a piece of space junk plummeting back to Earth, and that it appears to have a little tail, just as a meteor should.

11_17_fireball_meteor_entry
An ESA scientist used this image to calculate how fast the meteor was moving. ESA/NASA

Rüdiger Jehn, a second ESA meteor scientist, was also able to calculate the speed at which the fireball fell to Earth, at almost 90,000 miles per hour or 25 miles per second, twice as fast as the typical speed of these things.

The brighter flashes of light also visible in the footage are more mundane—that's what lightning strikes look like from space. Although the fireball is a rare capture, there's plenty more space photographs and videos where it came from—Nespoli sends postcards back to Earth about once a day.

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Meghan Bartels is a science journalist based in New York City who covers the science happening on the surface of ... Read more

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