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According to astronomer and spacecraft tracker Jonathan McDowell of the Harvard–Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, the bright object was likely a Starlink satellite burning up in Earth’s atmosphere as it fell back toward our planet.
The particular Starlink spacecraft, designated Starlink-4682, appears to have reentered “on a track over Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado and Oklahoma and appears to have been widely observed,” McDowell posted to X on Nov. 10.
a streak of fire is visible in the night sky above the rooflines of houses in a residential neighborhoodA still from a video shot by Jim Saueressig II of Burlington, Kansas submitted to the American Meteor Society, showing a fireball on the evening of Nov. 10, 2024. (Image credit: AMS/Jim Saueressig II of Burlington Kansas)
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According to astronomer and spacecraft tracker Jonathan McDowell of the Harvard–Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, the bright object was likely a Starlink satellite burning up in Earth’s atmosphere as it fell back toward our planet.
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The particular Starlink spacecraft, designated Starlink-4682, appears to have reentered “on a track over Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado and Oklahoma and appears to have been widely observed,” McDowell posted to X on Nov. 10.

Some ad blockers can disable our video player.
According to astronomer and spacecraft tracker Jonathan McDowell of the Harvard–Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, the bright object was likely a Starlink satellite burning up in Earth’s atmosphere as it fell back toward our planet.
The particular Starlink spacecraft, designated Starlink-4682, appears to have reentered “on a track over Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado and Oklahoma and appears to have been widely observed,” McDowell posted to X on Nov. 10.
a streak of fire is visible in the night sky above the rooflines of houses in a residential neighborhoodA still from a video shot by Jim Saueressig II of Burlington, Kansas submitted to the American Meteor Society, showing a fireball on the evening of Nov. 10, 2024. (Image credit: AMS/Jim Saueressig II of Burlington Kansas)
VIDEO NOT PLAYING?
Some ad blockers can disable our video player.
According to astronomer and spacecraft tracker Jonathan McDowell of the Harvard–Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, the bright object was likely a Starlink satellite burning up in Earth’s atmosphere as it fell back toward our planet.
You may like
Brilliant fireball explodes over North America as satellites capture flash from space (video)
SpaceX scrubs Starlink satellite launch due to apparent rocket helium leak
The particular Starlink spacecraft, designated Starlink-4682, appears to have reentered “on a track over Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado and Oklahoma and appears to have been widely observed,” McDowell posted to X on Nov. 10.