Mystery over what lit up the Essex skies last night

By The Editor

30th Mar 2021 | Local News

RESIDENTS across South Essex have reported a possible meteor shower or falling space debris that lit up the skies over the region overnight, with first comments and pictures appearing around 9 last night (Monday, 29 March).

Residents took to social media with an array of pictures and questions about the phenomena which had not been predicted.

Southern England is expected to get views of a regular 'season' of meteor showers next month which is known as the Lyrids and is due to fall and cross the skies on 21 or 22 April.

However, random meteor falls of small objects burning up are not uncommon.

In recent days there have been sightings of space junk associated with the launch of the rockets used to put satellites into orbit.

Earlier this month billionaire space adventurer and entrepreneur Elon Musk launched his latest series of 60 Starlink internet satellites to orbit aboard a two-stage Falcon 9 rocket, which then falls into its own decaying orbit. The latest rocket has had problems and has been breaking up earlier than expected. It is possible parts of that rocket were what was seen last night.

Because of the number of sightings and pictures it appears likely last night's was caused by the burn-up of human-made objects in Earth's atmosphere, because meteors or other natural objects would likely be moving much faster.

Did you capture any images of the skies over Burnham and the Dengie last night? Please email [email protected] with your views or post them via our Nubit button.

     

New burnhamanddengie Jobs Section Launched!!
Vacancies updated hourly!!
Click here: burnhamanddengie jobs

Share:

Related Articles

Basildon Hospital
Local News

Grant will help cancer and liver patients

Local News

Opportunity for youth organisations to cash in

Sign-Up for our FREE Newsletter

We want to provide burnhamanddengie with more and more clickbait-free local news.
To do that, we need a loyal newsletter following.
Help us survive and sign up to our FREE weekly newsletter.

Already subscribed? Thank you. Just press X or click here.
We won't pass your details on to anyone else.
By clicking the Subscribe button you agree to our Privacy Policy.