Aurora on Kitt Peak's Spacewatch All-Sky Cam right now! gagarin.lpl.arizona.edu/allsky.htm
Ja. "Das Objekt kam aus Richtung der Sonne und konnte daher von keinem der Himmelsüberwachungsprogramme (wie z. B. NEAT, LINEAR, LONEOS, CSS, CINEOS, Spacewatch) entdeckt werden." Siehe auch: de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meteor_...
"Discovery: 1998-03-18 / Spacewatch / Kitt Peak / 691 Mary Robinette Kowal (b. 1969) is an American science fiction writer and puppeteer whose very human heroines, at the forefront of science and engineering in their universes, inspire us to explore our solar system ourselves."
More about SPACEWATCH® here: spacewatch.lpl.arizona.edu
Hey that's the Lunar and Planetary Lab's own SPACEWATCH® program in that first one!
Spacewatch All-Sky Camera right now! gagarin.lpl.arizona.edu/allsky.htm
Aurora Borealis alert. Go out, it's bit of massive sun storm to see it this easy on De Cymru. #Aurora#spacewatch#nightsky
<within a radius of 100 meters from the designated location in the area of the Shiori Crater. Former NASA employee and editor-in-chief of SpaceWatch Global, Emma Gatti, praised this precision.
The image was taken by Dr. Cassandra Lejoly with the Spacewatch Mosaic Camera on Steward Observatory’s 102-year-old 0.9m telescope located on Iolkam Du’ag (Kitt Peak) in the Tohono O’odham Nation. At the time, 5942’s apparent brightness was V~15.6 & it was ~1.67247 AU) from Earth