Tag Archives: fireball

Reddit Post Seemingly Proves That Samsung’s Galaxy S-Series ‘Moon Photos’ Are Fake, and They’ve Been Blatantly Lying About Them – Daring Fireball

  1. Reddit Post Seemingly Proves That Samsung’s Galaxy S-Series ‘Moon Photos’ Are Fake, and They’ve Been Blatantly Lying About Them Daring Fireball
  2. It looks like Samsung is cheating on ‘space zoom’ moon photos – General Discussion Discussions on AppleInsider Forums AppleInsider
  3. Is Samsung ‘cheating’ on space zoom moon photos? Post by Reddit user sparks row | Mint Mint
  4. Is Samsung Galaxy ‘space zoom’ moon photos fake? Reddit user post sparks row DNA India
  5. It looks like Samsung is cheating on ‘space zoom’ moon photos AppleInsider
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Lawsuit alleges that Fireball Cinnamon mini bottles are “misleading” because they don’t contain whiskey

Fireball Cinnamon fans be warned — the mini bottles of the fiery drink you’re picking up at the convenience store do not actually contain any whiskey.

In fact, the drink is a malt beverage flavored to taste like whiskey, much to the dismay of Anna Marquez — the Illinois woman who is suing Sazerac Company, the maker of Fireball, for “misleading” packaging.

The class-action lawsuit, which was filed by Marquez earlier this month, alleges that the labeling on the small 99-cent bottles of Fireball Cinnamon look misleadingly similar to the labeling on bottles of its other product, Fireball Cinnamon Whisky.

Fireball Cinnamon Whisky has 33% alcohol by volume, while Fireball Cinnamon has 16.5% alcohol by volume, according to the company’s website.

Bottles of Fireball Cinnamon Whiskey and Fireball Cinnamon, both of which are produced by the Sazerac Company. 

U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois


Customers “expecting those small bottles labeled ‘Fireball Cinnamon’ to contain whiskey ‘was an easy mistake to make, and one intended by the manufacturer,'” the suit reads. “In fact, what consumers were purchasing at non-liquor stores ‘[was] not whiskey at all’ even though the[ir] labels are almost identical.”

The lawsuit alleges that while it is legal for the company to use the brand name of “Fireball” for both drinks, federal and state legislation prohibits creating an overall “misleading impression.”

In addition to similar labels, the lawsuit complains about the text size on Fireball Cinnamon’s label describing its composition. The claim alleges that the phrasing, “Malt Beverage With Natural Whisky & Other Flavors and Carmel Color” is written in the “smallest allowed size.” 

The use of the phrase “natural whisky” creates misunderstandings about the product, the lawsuit also states. 

“Using the words ‘With Natural Whisky & Other Flavors’ is a clever turn of phrase because consumers who strain to read this will see how ‘Natural Whisky’ is distinct from ‘Other Flavors,'” the lawsuit reads.

Customers “will think the Product is a malt beverage with added (1) natural whisky and (2) other flavors,” it added. 

In other words, buyers may believe that natural whisky is added to the drink as a separate ingredient, rather than understanding that only “whisky flavors” are added.

On the Fireball website, the company spells out the difference between its whisky and malt products.

“There are 2 key differences between the Fireball Cinnamon labels vs the Fireball Whisky label: Any package with Fireball ‘Cinnamon Whisky’ on the front label is our whisky-based product,” the site explains. “Any product with Fireball ‘Cinnamon’ on the front label, without ‘Whisky’, is either our malt-based or wine-based product.”

The lawsuit, though filed solely by Marquez, seeks to cover anyone in Illinois, North Dakota, Wyoming, Alaska, Arizona, Idaho, Mississippi, Iowa, South Carolina, Kansas, Arkansas, and Utah who has purchased Fireball Cinnamon.

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Viewers Report Fireball Sighting Over Oklahoma Sky

Reports of a bright fireball and a loud boom over parts of northeast Oklahoma are rolling in on Friday morning.

Viewers across Oklahoma have shared their accounts and video of the fireball that passed over the state.

A video shared by Cheri Patton shows a reflection of the bright light illuminating the night sky in Broken Arrow around 3:30 a.m.

Video shared by viewer Patricia Patton from Broken Arrow also shows the bright fireball crossing the sky.

Several fireball sightings have been reported around northeast Oklahoma on the American Meteor Society’s website.

Anyone who would like to report a fireball sighting can do so by Clicking Here.



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Scientists trace fireball to strange rocky meteoroid from the Oort Cloud

A rocky meteoroid that exploded over Canada last year was more extraordinary than it first seemed: it originated from the outer solar system, where scientists thought only icy bodies exist.

A cavalcade of both professional and amateur astronomers caught images and videos of the meteoroid as it exploded over Alberta. By studying this data, researchers have determined that the meteoroid broke apart like a rocky object, surviving to deeper into Earth’s atmosphere than icy objects on similar trajectories do. However, the analysis also suggested that the meteoroid came from the Oort Cloud, far beyond Pluto. Discovering a rocky body from this region could rewrite existing theories of how the solar system formed.

“This discovery supports an entirely different model of the formation of the solar system, one which backs the idea that significant amounts of rocky material co-exist with icy objects within the Oort Cloud,” Denis Vida, a meteor physis specialist at Western University in Canada, said in a statement. “This result is not explained by the currently favored solar system formation models. It’s a complete game changer.”

Related: Brilliant fireball over Mississippi sparks loud booms (and satellite photos)

A cool, rocky meteoroid 

Scientists have always believed that the Oort Cloud consists exclusively of icy objects. When passing stars displace these Oort Cloud objects, they head into the inner solar system as comets. As they do so radiation from the sun causes ice to change from solid to gas, blowing off gas and dust that forms the stereotypical cometary tails of gas and dust that can stretch millions of miles or kilometers.

While astronomers haven’t directly seen an object in the Oort Cloud, they have seen many cometary objects that started life in the region and they’ve all been made of ice. That’s how scientists got the idea that the outer solar system is made of only icy bodies and nothing rocky — a premise they used to develop theories about the formation of our planetary system. 

Rocky fireballs are fairly commonly observed, but all previous examples have originated from much closer to Earth, making this traveler, which has journeyed vast distances, completely unexpected. 

The University of Alberta caught the grapefruit-size, 4.4-pound (2 kilograms) rocky meteoroid using Global Fireball Observatory (GFO) cameras developed in Australia. Western researchers then calculated its orbit Global Meteor Network tools. This revealed the meteoroid was traveling on an orbit usually occupied only by icy, long-period comets from the Oort Cloud.

“In 70 years of regular fireball observations, this is one of the most peculiar ever recorded,” Hadrien Devillepoix, a planetary astronomer at Curtin University in Australia and principal investigator of GFO, said in the statement. 

“It validates the strategy of the GFO established five years ago, which widened the ‘fishing net’ to 5 million square kilometers of skies and brought together scientific experts from around the globe,” Devillepoix said. “It not only allows us to find and study precious meteorites, but it is the only way to have a chance of catching these rarer events that are essential to understanding our solar system.”

The team now wants to explain how this rocky meteoroid ended up so far away from the inner solar system, hoping the information may help better understand the formation of the solar system’s planets and Earth.

“The better we understand the conditions in which the solar system was formed, the better we understand what was necessary to spark life,” Vida said. “We want to paint a picture, as accurately as possible, of these early moments of the solar system that were so critical for everything that happened after.”

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Grapefruit-size fireball from mysterious Oort Cloud could rewrite the history of the solar system

A dazzling fireball that ended its cosmic journey over central Alberta, Canada could change astronomers’ understanding of how the solar system formed 4.5 billion years ago.

Caught on camera on Feb. 22, 2021, the grapefruit-size rocky meteoroid is thought to have come from the Oort Cloud, a reservoir of celestial objects that encircles the entire solar system and separates it from interstellar space. Scientists have never directly observed rocky objects in the Oort Cloud and have long believed that it holds only icy objects. But the rocky object that burnt up over Canada challenges popular theories of the Oort Cloud’s formation, and the early solar system’s formation in general, according to a study published Dec. 12 in the journal Nature Astronomy (opens in new tab).

“This discovery supports an entirely different model of the formation of the solar system, one which backs the idea that significant amounts of rocky material co-exist with icy objects within the Oort cloud,” lead study author Denis Vida, a meteor physics postdoctoral researcher at Western University in London, Ontario, Canada, said in a statement. “This result is not explained by the currently favored solar system formation models. It’s a complete game changer.”

According to NASA, the Oort Cloud is thought to have formed when gravity from the newly formed planets pushed icy objects away from the sun. Gravity from the Milky Way galaxy caused the objects to settle on the edge of the solar system instead. 

A popular current theory about how the solar system formed is the pebble accretion model, which describes millimeter-size pebbles being sucked together over time to form celestial bodies. 

“These findings challenge solar system formation models based on pebble accretion alone, which currently cannot explain the high observed abundance of rocky material in the Oort cloud as derived from fireball measurements and telescopic data,” the authors wrote in the new study. 

Rather, these results support what’s known as the “Grand Tack” theory of solar system formation. This model proposes that Jupiter formed closer to the sun and migrated towards it before gravitational effects between Jupiter and Saturn forced both planets farther out. Only this model can account for sufficient amounts of rocky material from the inner solar system being ejected to the Oort cloud to explain the fireball, according to the researchers.

The fireball was picked up by Global Fireball Observatory (GFO) cameras run by the University of Alberta. The GFO is a global collaboration between organizations including the Lunar and Planetary Institute, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center and several universities. Its aim is to image fireballs so that meteorites can be recovered. 

Calculations of the fireball’s trajectory show that it traveled from the outer reaches of the solar system, similar to the trajectories of icy comets — the objects thought to inhabit the Oort Cloud. The fireball’s rocky nature was confirmed by its descent deeper into Earth’s atmosphere than icy objects traveling on a similar orbit could survive. It also then broke apart, just as a regular rocky fireball does.

However, the Alberta fireball is not a one-off. The researchers found a similar fireball in a historical database that never got noticed at the time. These multiple rocky bodies suggest that between 1% and 20% of meteoroids coming from the Oort Cloud are rocky, the authors said. 

“The better we understand the conditions in which the solar system was formed, the better we understand what was necessary to spark life,” said Vida. “We want to paint a picture, as accurately as possible, of these early moments of the solar system that were so critical for everything that happened after.”

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A Fireball That Exploded Over Canada Has Been Traced to a Very Unexpected Origin : ScienceAlert

Earth is under constant bombardment from space. Dust, pebbles, and chunks of rock fall into our atmosphere on a daily basis, sometimes burning up spectacularly in a blazing streak across the sky.

These bolides, or fireballs, are typically larger pieces of asteroid or comet that have broken off their parent body and wound up falling into Earth’s gravity well.

But scientists have ascertained that one such fireball that exploded over Canada last year is not the usual kind of meteor. Based on its trajectory across the sky, a team has traced the object all the way through the Solar System to a starting point in the Oort Cloud – a vast sphere of icy objects far, far beyond the orbit of Pluto.

It’s not extremely unusual for material from the Oort Cloud to be ejected and sent inwards towards the Sun. However, this one burned up and exploded in a manner that said it was made of rock, not the chunk of frozen ammonia, methane, and water we might expect of an Oort Cloud object.

It’s a discovery that suggests our understanding of the Oort Cloud could use a little tweaking.

“This discovery supports an entirely different model of the formation of the Solar System, one which backs the idea that significant amounts of rocky material co-exist with icy objects within the Oort Cloud,” says physicist Denis Vida of the University of Western Ontario in Canada.

“This result is not explained by the currently favored Solar System formation models. It’s a complete game changer.”

Visitors from the Oort Cloud that we’ve identified to date are extremely icy. They’re sometimes known as long-period comets, on orbits around the Sun that take hundreds to tens of millions of years, at random inclinations, and highly elliptical.

They’re thought to have been kicked out of the Oort Cloud between 2,000 and 100,000 astronomical units from the Sun by gravitational influences, and flung inwards on their looping paths.

Because a good number of these long-period comets have been identified, scientists have a decent idea of the characteristics they (and their orbits) have in common.

This brings us to 22 February 2021, when a fireball streaked across the sky some 100 kilometers (62 miles) north of Edmonton, Canada. It was observed and recorded by multiple instruments, including satellites and two Global Fireball Observatory cameras here on Earth.

For 2.4 seconds, these cameras tracked the meteor over 148.5 kilometers, giving scientists detailed data on the object’s trajectory and disintegration. Fireballs are thought to heat up and explode as atmospheric gases seep into minute cracks in the rock, pressurizing it from the inside and causing it to go boom.

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The object, Vida and his team found, was around 10 centimeters (4 inches) across, with a weight of around 2 kilograms (4.4 pounds). It was thought to have fallen deeper into the atmosphere than any icy object has ever been known to. In fact, its burn and disintegration were exactly consistent with a rocky fireball.

However, when the researchers used the data to calculate its inbound trajectory, the results they got were consistent not with the usual local meteor, but the orbit of a long-period comet.

“In 70 years of regular fireball observations, this is one of the most peculiar ever recorded. It validates the strategy of the Global Fireball Observatory established five years ago, which widened the ‘fishing net’ to 5 million square kilometers of skies, and brought together scientific experts from around the globe,” says astronomer Hadrien Devillepoix of Curtin University in Australia.

“It not only allows us to find and study precious meteorites, but it is the only way to have a chance of catching these rarer events that are essential to understanding our Solar System.”

From this one object, the researchers were also able to search the Meteorite Observation and Recovery Project database and published literature for possible Oort Cloud origins, and identified two other meteors: one that fell over Czechia in 1997, called the Karlštejn fireball, on an orbit similar to Halley’s Comet, and 1979 meteor MORP 441, which also had a comet-like trajectory.

This suggests that, rarely, rocky meteors might be winding up on Earth after a long journey from the Oort Cloud, thought to be primordial material left over from the formation of the Solar System. Figuring out how and why the objects remained rocky, and then ended up here, is the next step.

“We want to explain how this rocky meteoroid ended up so far away because we want to understand our own origins. The better we understand the conditions in which the Solar System was formed, the better we understand what was necessary to spark life,” says Vida.

“We want to paint a picture, as accurately as possible, of these early moments of the Solar System that were so critical for everything that happened after.”

The research has been published in Nature Astronomy.

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Hundreds report seeing a bright fireball in northeastern U.S.

Less than two weeks after a bright fireball lit up the sky above the Great Lakes, scattering space pebbles on their shores, another spectacular meteor impressed skywatchers in the Northeast. 

The streak of light that sliced through the sky on Thursday (Dec. 1) at about 7:30 p.m. EST (0030 GMT on Dec. 2), was seen by at least 737 witnesses across the states of Michigan, Indiana, Ohio, New York, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Maryland, Tennessee, and South and North Carolina according to the American Meteor Society (opens in new tab) (AMS). Sightings in Canada’s Ontario province were also reported.

Quite a few doorbell cameras as well as meteocams (cameras aimed skyward to capture fireballs) captured the meteor, prompting their owners to proudly share the footage with the AMS as well as on Twitter. 

Related: This astronomer turns small Eastern European country into an asteroid-spotting powerhouse

A bright streak of light caused by a meteor passing above north-eastern U.S. (Image credit: American Meteor Society/ Elizabeth S. /https://fireball.amsmeteors.org/members/imo_photo/view_photo?photo_id=13897)

“Just watched a gorgeous green & orange bolide zoom to Earth east of Granville — anyone else see a meteor tonight in eastern Ohio?” Twitter user Jeff Gill (opens in new tab) shared shortly after the event. 

His tweet elicited quite a few responses from other lucky witnesses. 

Phil Haddad from Pittsburgh was even luckier, catching the fireball on his doorbell camera.

“I don’t often tweet, but when I do it’s because I captured a meteor on my doorbell cam #pittsburgh #meteor,” he said, sharing the footage (opens in new tab) proudly on Twitter.

Another Twitter user, Robert Tinney from Cleveland, responded by sharing his doorbell cam (opens in new tab) footage. 

No further information about the nature of this space rock, which AMS labeled 9579-2022, has been made available so far, including whether any of it could have reached the ground. 

On Nov. 19, fragments of a 3-foot (1 meter) space rock fell in the same region on the shores of Lake Ontario. Astronomers detected that space rock three hours before it entered Earth’s atmosphere and were able to calculate where it might hit the ground. The rock was only the sixth ever detected before smashing into our planet. 

Follow Tereza Pultarova on Twitter @TerezaPultarova. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook



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Suspected meteor lights up sky in Michigan and beyond Thursday night

BERKLEY, Mich. – Some people across the country were lucky enough to capture footage of a suspected fireball as it streaked across the sky on Thursday night.

The suspected meteor was spotted by many in Southeast Michigan. Local 4 received a few emails and phonecalls from viewers who said they saw it themselves.

According to the American Meteor Society, reports of sightings go as far south as South Carolina and as far north as Pinconning, Michigan. People between Pennsylvania and Indiana have reported sightings.

There have been 693 sightings reported to the AMS and most of the sightings occurred between 7 and 8 p.m. If you have a photo or video you’d like to share, post it to our Pins page here, or email us.

Read: Did you spot a meteor in the sky above SE Michigan on Thursday night?

Videos submitted to the American Meteor Society

Video captured in Royal Oak, Michigan by a Local 4 viewer:

Video captured in Berkley, Michigan by Al Holland K8ALH:

Video captured in Chardon, Ohio by Bill Ericson:

Video captured in Wadsworth, Ohio by Stephen Martin:

Video captured in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania by Jared Rackley:

You can view two more videos by clicking the links below:

Copyright 2022 by WDIV ClickOnDetroit – All rights reserved.

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Eerie green fireball detected hours before smashing into Lake Ontario in the dead of night

 

At half past 3:00 a.m. (EST) on Nov. 19, a bright green fireball streaked through the sky over the northeastern United States and southeastern Canada. Witnesses reported seeing a helicopter-like object cruising silently through the air before lighting up huge swathes of the night like an enormous lightning bolt. After about 10 seconds, it was gone.

This fireball was a small meteor, detected by astronomers just three hours before it tumbled through Earth‘s atmosphere, caught fire and broke up into hundreds of pieces. Most of those pieces likely smacked straight into Lake Ontario, though some small chunks may have impacted land on the lake’s southern shore, according to NASA.

Seven observatories around the world watched the meteor make its early morning death dive, and at least 59 people in New York, Maryland, Pennsylvania and the nearby province of Ontario, Canada reported seeing the fireball on the International Meteor Organization‘s meteor-watching database.

One witness — Dereck Bowen of Brantford, Ontario (a town located about 60 miles, or 97 kilometers, west of the New York border) — managed to capture the fireball’s descent with a GoPro camera set to automatically record the sky at night. A spectacular 30-second exposure of the sky shows the moment the meteor soared overhead, with the rock’s bright green trail plunging down toward the Earth and lighting up the clouds around it. 

Another camera set up outside the nearby CN Tower — a 1,815-foot-tall (553 meters) communications tower in Toronto — also captured the meteor’s bright passage across the sky.

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Fireballs are exceptionally bright meteors that typically originate from asteroids or pieces of comets that orbit the sun, according to NASA

The Nov. 19 fireball — now officially named 2022 WJ1 — was likely a small asteroid measuring no more than 3.2 feet (1 m) in diameter. When space rocks like these enter Earth’s atmosphere, they heat up and slow down from the intense friction, producing a visible wake of fiery light behind them. Depending on a meteor’s composition, it may also glow green as it tumbles to its doom.

Fireballs are generally considered to be harmless, as most of their pieces burn up in the atmosphere before impacting Earth. However, there may be some rare exceptions. On Nov. 5, a man in California claimed that a fireball set his house on fire after it appeared in the sky moments earlier. Experts from the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection are still investigating the cause of the blaze. 



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Videos captured a fireball flashing across the Toronto skyline before it struck Earth near Niagara Falls

Toronto skylinePierre Ogeron/Getty Images

  • A fireball lit up a neighborhood and passed over Toronto early Saturday morning.

  • The object’s impact on Earth was predicted, marking the sixth time in history that has occurred.

  • The European Space Agency said such detection technology for small objects is improving.

A vibrant fireball that flashed across the night sky in the early hours of Saturday morning passed over the skyline of Toronto, Canada, before colliding with Earth near Niagara Falls.

The fireball was captured in several videos, including one that showed it appearing to pass by the city’s CN Tower.

 

Another video, taken from a security camera at the front door of a home, showed the fireball light up the entire sky over the neighborhood before zooming past.

 

The European Space Agency said the event marked only the sixth time in history the impact of a space object with Earth was successfully predicted. The agency said while most asteroid collisions with Earth are only discovered after the fact from evidence like craters, the number of occasions in which a space rock is detected before it strikes is growing.

In fact, all six detections have taken place since 2008, according to ESA, which said continued improvement in sky scanning telescopes will likely make detection of smaller objects — which frequently strike Earth — more common.

Large asteroids, on the other hand, are much easier to spot.

Saturday’s fireball was anticipated by amateur and professional astronomers in the hours before it struck. The Minor Planet Center, which monitors asteroids, said a fast-moving object was detected by the Mount Lemmon Survey near Tucson, Arizona, triggering a “warning of an imminent impact.”

The MPC said seven observatories were able to spot the object before it entered the Earth’s atmosphere at around 3:27 a.m. ET over Brantford, Ontario. The object was less than 1 meter in size, according to the ESA.

The term fireball is used to refer to exceptionally bright meteors, commonly called shooting stars, that can be seen over a wide area. “Objects causing fireballs are usually not large enough to survive passage through the Earth’s atmosphere intact, although fragments, or meteorites, are sometimes recovered on the ground,” according to NASA.

Mike Hankey of the American Meteor Society told The New York Times its possible meteorites — debris from a space object — from Saturday’s event could be discovered near Niagara Falls.

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