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Fabulous fireball streaking across western skies was debris from a Russian rocket
People shared video and photo of the mystery light and talked about it in the social media. “We had a meteor shower a week and a half ago, the Geminid meteor shower”.
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Americans took to Twitter Tuesday night to have a minor freakout over a mysterious fireball that streaked across the sky.
The light spotted in and around Las Vegas was reportedly seen as far away as Bakersfield and Sacramento in California. Others wondered if it was a meteor breaking up on re-entry or space debris from a fallen satellite. They say they rocket’s body likely detached from the craft bringing materials into space and burned up as it started to go out of orbit.
But U.S. Strategic Command put the conjecture to rest when it announced the light was caused by a Russian SL-4 rocket re-entering the atmosphere over Arizona about 7:08 p.m. MT.
According to Strategic Command, the rocket was launched on Monday.
The light was seen streaking across the sky before it appeared to break up.
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Vandenberg Air Force Base confirmed there were no scheduled operations Tuesday night, said Larry Hill, chief of communications. The Trident II (D5) missile was not armed, the Navy said.