Community Corner
'Fireball' Over Georgia Was Actually Space Junk
The overnight light show was spotted over Grayson, Loganville and elsewhere around 1:30 a.m. Monday.

Image: Dots represent space junk orbiting the planet. nasa.gov
By GREG HAMBRICK (Patch Staff)
A mysterious light show over Loganville and Grayson, and other parts of Georgia early Monday morning wasn’t a fireball. Instead, experts say it was space junk.
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There were 132 sightings of the event at 1:30 a.m. over Georgia, South Carolina and other states in the region, according to AMS Meteors, which tirelessly tracks reports of these things.
Spotters from Loganville and Grayson each reported seeing the fireball moving from “up right to down left.”
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The Loganville spotter also wrote it was “Broken up into one major component and perhaps 6 or 8 smaller pieces.”
David Dundee, an astronomer for the Tellus Science Museum in Cartersville, told the AJC that the speed was far too slow for a meteor or fireball.
There are more than 500,000 pieces of debris, or space junk, orbiting the Earth, according to NASA. So, it’s not surprising that Dundee told WSBTV that it’s not unusual to get these mistaken fireball reports.
“On the average I see two or three reports every month of a bright, really bright fireball,” Dundee said.
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