Meteor illuminates the Florida sky with a bright flash



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A mysterious fireball that lit up the skies over northern Florida on Saturday night has turned out to be a meteor that has been detected by the weather radar, officials said.

The fall of the space rock was reported around 23:52. on Taylor County, said on Twitter the office of the National Meteorological Service in Tallahassee.

The meteor's flash was so bright that it was picked up by weather satellites that are typically used to detect thunderstorms and lightning.

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The NWS posted a photo where the fireball was picked up by the GOES Lightning Mapper

Another weather service office in Charleston, S.C., also shared the light detected by the fireball as she was crossing the sky.

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Officials said they had not received any information indicating where the meteor would have landed or whether it had broken down in the atmosphere. Residents Georgia and South Carolina have also reported seeing the flash.

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Meteors are what happened when meteorites – what we call "space rocks" – penetrate at high speed into the Earth's atmosphere and burn up, according to NASA.

"It's also when we call them" shooting stars, "the agency notes," Some meteors may even look brighter than Venus – that's what we call "fireballs."

Scientists estimate that about 48.5 tons (44,000 kg) of meteorites fall each day on Earth, according to NASA.

"When a meteoroid survives in the atmosphere and hits the ground, it's called a meteorite," says the space agency.

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