Date:
January 23, 2007
Location: Charlotte, North Carolina, United States
About
8 p.m. Wednesday, something peculiar flashed in the sky
-- something twinkly, something colorful, something eye-catching.
"Bright blue-green ball with a white tail,"
says Jim Neal of Shelby, who spotted it just west of Blacksburg,
S.C., after dinner at Kelly's Steak House.

PHOTO BY CHARLES MILLER; cropped and lightened by Charlotte.com
for clarity
Source:
The Charlotte Observer,(Charlotte, N.C.), Jan. 24, 2007
911
callers report lights in sky
Unknown Freaky Orb drew eyes, imaginations across area
MARK
WASHBURN
Earthlings,
you've had an otherworldly experience, a cosmic encounter.
About
8 p.m. Wednesday, something peculiar flashed in the sky
-- something twinkly, something colorful, something eye-catching.
Something
strange. And blue. Or green. Or blue-green.
"Bright
blue-green ball with a white tail," says Jim
Neal of Shelby, who spotted it just west of Blacksburg,
S.C., after dinner at Kelly's Steak House.
"A
greenish-like light low in the sky," says Julie
Bigham, driving home from church with her kids near Matthews.
"We thought a small plane or helicopter was going
to crash."
"A
slow-moving bluish glow," says David Whitesides,
who works in Polkton and who watched it while soaking
in his hot tub.
"Large,
bright green ball," says Brett Lay, who was headed
to Chick-fil-A in Gastonia with his wife and four children
after church. "Had a haze about it."
"Almost
looked like a flare," reports Amy Bromberg, who
was on Interstate 485. "Kind of creepy."
Venus,
perhaps? It's often a suspect in UFO sightings, particularly
when it's as bright as it is right now.
Not
Venus. It vanished beneath the horizon about 7 p.m.
Stricken
plane?
Nope.
All aircraft accounted for.
Space
junk? Errant satellite?
Negative,
says NORAD. No re-entries of the sizable man-made objects
they track.
OK.
So ... alien object?
Bingo.
But not the E.T. variety.
"A
fireball," says Daniel Caton, observatory director
and astronomy professor at Appalachian State University
in Boone.
Based
on the reports, Caton believes it was an unusually bright
meteor that burned up about 30 miles high in the atmosphere
somewhere above Charlotte. Sightings came from more than
100 miles away.
Many
witnesses say the light appeared to fizzle at the end
and break into pieces, making it a special kind of fireball
called a bolide. In the universe of meteors, they're A-List
entertainers, known for their splashy finales.
Each
day, an estimated 4 billion meteors burn up in Earth's
atmosphere. Most are the size of sand grains, but rocks
tumble in, too. NASA estimates that the Earth packs on
several tons a day in meteors.
Some
witnesses who contacted the Observer on Thursday wondered
whether it could be debris from the recent anti-satellite
test by China.
Probably
not -- but maybe, says Michael Kucharek, spokesman for
the North American Aerospace Defense Command near Colorado
Springs, Colo., which tracks satellites and space junk
-- everything from lost screwdrivers to astronaut gloves.
He says he's been getting an unusually high number of
calls this week about things spotted in the sky.
China's
satellite-zapping exercise has probably increased space
litter by about a million pieces, making it nearly as
untidy as Interstate 77 in Charlotte.
"It's
anybody's guess," Kucharek says, "what
direction this stuff has gone."
Source:
http://www.ufoevidence.org/cases/case1049.htm