Thursday, April 23, 2026

How dense you gotta be really? Fireballs etc...

 


Sightings of Meteors Surge, 

and Scientists Aren’t Sure Why

NYT 4/21/26


"The frequency of fireballs 

in our planet’s skies 

seemed to grow 

in recent months. 

NASA and other meteor experts 

can’t agree on what explains it."


(We have already been through all of this

previously.)


"It seems 

as though stars have been shooting across 

the heavens far more than usual lately."


(Aint no "seems" to it

it is a reality.)


"In March, fireball after fireball coursed through the skies of North America and Europe. Some of the dazzling apparitions dropped meteorites in their wake. In Ohio, space shards set down in fields and forests. Other rocky visitors smashed through the roofs of people’s homes and ricocheted around their bedrooms.

“It’s a shooting gallery,” 

said Mike Hankey, an amateur astronomer 

at the American Meteor Society. 

“There’s stuff flying all over the place.”


'The number of fireballs 

over the first three months of 2026 

was double 

what is usually reported 

to the society 

in the first quarter of other years."


“It does seem unusual, right?” said Bill Cooke, 

who leads the Meteoroid Environments Office 

at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala.


Is something peculiar happening in space? 

Are there more fireballs screaming through the atmosphere than usual? 

And if so, why?"


"Space agencies, including NASA, aim to be aware 

of any sizable asteroids that may strike our planet and cause harm. 


(Ask yourself this:

If they knew

it was actually going to happen?

Would they want you to know?

You already know the answer.)


"They use satellites, telescopes, cameras and other government sensors to spot smaller, innocuous asteroids that explode into fireballs. The nonprofit American Meteor Society also runs a reporting system that since 2005 has relied on the public to record observations. If you or your cameras have spied a fireball, they want to hear about it."


"In January and February, the society registered a gradual but notable uptick in reported fireballs. In March, that uptick became a spike. In total, during those three months, there were 40 fireballs seen by 50 or more people, twice the January-to-March average of 20 (an average calculated using data from 2021 to 2025).'


'Of those 40, 33 unleashed thunderclap-like sonic booms — a historic high in the society’s records — suggesting the space rocks responsible were often on the larger side. As an example, the meteor that exploded over Ohio on March 17 did so with the force of 370 tons of TNT."


(Already pointed this out:

3I/ATLAS whizzed by us at a 5 degree angle 

to the earths ecliptic.


Reference:

Thursday, March 26, 2026

We already told everybody why yo...


(3I/ATLAS was within

5 degrees difference to it)


they are spending 

less time 

in the atmosphere

because they have 

a more direct path

and that is why 

they are bigger

and causing the fireballs

and the sonic booms.


So its not just they are bigger

it's that they are spending less time 

in the atmosphere as well.


It's like a protractor:


The earths ecliptic is the line 

on the bottom.

0's on the right and left.


These are the shortest distance

to the center

(Earth in this analogy.)


As you go up the curve

on either side

the distance increases,

meaning fragments would

be in the atmosphere longer


3I/ATLAS's trajectory 

was within 5 degrees 

of the earths ecliptic 

or almost straight on,

this is what 

your creator intended,

this is displayed intention

and we all know

aliens can not exist.)


This angle would make any fragments coming off of it

have a shorter path through the earths atmosphere

thereby resulting in larger meteoroids

as less would be burnt up by the friction created

by the earths atmosphere.)


"During a video call, Mr. Hankey showed off a small meteorite from that event, one he had purchased from a local Ohioan when he visited the area. “This is extraterrestrial material in every sense of the word,” he said."


"This sort of activity can sometimes be attributed to a major meteor shower. These events, like the Lyrids in April (which are peaking on Wednesday), the Perseids in August or the Geminids in December, are the result of Earth’s flying through the debris trail left in the wake of a comet (or, sometimes, an asteroid).


(Or a volcano tumbling

through space :-)

3I/ATLAS)


"But none were scheduled during the fireball spike.

 The first quarter of the year 

is relatively lacking in known major meteor showers."


"In response to growing public interest, a NASA public affairs official said in a blog post at the end of March, “While it may seem like meteor reports and sightings have been more frequent recently, it is not out of the ordinary.” The post explained that from February to April, there is often a 10 to 30 percent increase in the number of extremely luminous meteors — and nobody is quite sure why."


Saturday, March 28, 2026

Of Albino Elephants and a Billion ton (Or 33) rocks...


So here is but one example of the

"EXTREME PROPAGANDA"

she was talking about


"It's Fireball Season!

Answering Your Meteor Questions"

NASA.GOV 3/26/26


Im not even going to dignify 

that bunch of garbage

with any comments

about it's contents.


KNOW THIS:

This is how absolutely absurd

the times we are living in have become

see above about:


"Living in an unreal world."


Daylight Fireballs 

make up less than 1%

of all meteors

they are 

EXTREMELY

rare events.


So the title 

to that NASA propaganda piece

might as well have said:


"HEY, 

you know those 

extremely rare events?

That only make up 

less than 1% 

of the meteors we see?


WELL NOW WE HAVE 

A "SEASON" for them!"


Or?

It's like saying:

Hey, albino elephants are 

extremely rare,

but now there are so many

it's open season on them!


WTF?)



"Mr. Hankey said that this 10 to 30 percent increase was already baked into the American Meteor Society tally, and that it doesn’t explain the apparent doubling of fireball sightings in the year’s first quarter."


“I’ve done the best job I can do to make sense out of this,”

 said Mr. Hankey, who is not formally trained in astronomy or statistics."


"If the meteor society’s tally is correct, 

then what might explain it?"


"One thing can be quickly dismissed.

“We don’t think it’s aliens,” Mr. Hankey said."

 

(Life REQUIRES information

which requires an intellect so yeah,...naw...)


"And the fireballs are clearly made of naturally occurring stone,

 judging by all the meteorites people have found.


"Could the fireballs be coming from 

an undiscovered meteor shower?'


"Peter Brown, a meteor physicist at Western University in Ontario, said there were reasons to doubt this explanation. With one exception — the Taurids, which appear in the fall — meteor showers don’t generally involve the sort of large space rocks that create radiant and long-lived fireballs like those seen this past March."


(Well what if it is a new one, 

generated by 3I/ATLAS

and it produced:

"the sort of large space rocks 

that create radiant and long-lived fireballs

 like those seen this past March."

Until it is effectively ruled out?

And it hasn't been anywhere close to that

"effectively ruled out"

then 3I/ATLAS as a source of these 

needs to be considered.

INSTEAD?

NOBODY IS TALKING ABOUT IT

AS A POSSIBLE SOURCE

of these fireballs.


What do I always say?

In the times we are living in

it's not what people say

that matter

it's what they should be saying

but are not

that matters most.

This is how you can easily tell

what really matters, whats going on etc.)


"The meteors in showers also plunge into Earth’s atmosphere

with very similar speeds and trajectories.


“If these were part of some sort of coherent stream, 

from a single source, 

you would expect them to have very similar 

directions of arrival from the sky,” 

said Dr. Brown, referring to March’s fireballs. 

“That would suggest a common origin. 

But these don’t.”


(3I/ATLAS was rotating, weirdly

like it had a molten core in it.


The angle,

 the:

"directions of arrival from the sky"

mentioned above
would depend
on where the fragment was
in the rotation
when it broke off.

If you have ever used an angle grinder?


The angle you are using the grinder with
on the surface you are grinding on
determines where the sparks fly off to.
Change the angle of the grinder
(3I?ATLAS rotation in our example)
and the sparks fly 
(fragments break off)
in a different direction.

Same exact thing here.

None of these brainiacs 
can figure any of this out?

Bout as complicated as knowing 
Iran has missile tech
we don't have an answer for.

This age man...

Had enough a long time ago...

Maranatha Lord Jesus indeed.)





"Which leads to another potential explanation.

“There’s a lot more attention on the sky,” 

said Dr. Cooke of NASA.


"A fireball captured on a home security camera in Herne Bay in southeastern England in October. The major growth of personal camera devices may explain in part the uptick in sightings."

Over the last decade, there has been major growth in the number of cameras out in the world, from those on smartphones to autonomous shutters on doorbells and dashboards. When several fireballs make headlines, it turns plenty of people into meteor-curious skywatchers.

Perhaps more fireballs are being observed simply because “people’s focus is heightened,” Dr. Brown said. The number of fireballs actually falling from the sky, both seen and unseen, could be normal.'


(This is their "go-to" explanation 

because most people will fall for it,

 as on the surface 

it makes a lot of sense, 

however:


THIS DOES NOTHING TO EXPLAIN:

"the sort of large space rocks 

that create radiant and long-lived fireballs 

like those seen this past March."

(Like they are over...plz...)

OR:

'Of those 40, 33 unleashed thunderclap-like sonic booms — a historic high in the society’s records — suggesting the space rocks responsible were often on the larger side.)


"Keen to find out the truth, Althea Moorhead, who works in Dr. Cooke’s NASA office, described a statistical analysis on the fireball data that she had conducted; this analysis has not been published or subjected to peer review. As the meteor society noted, the average number of reported fireballs (seen by at least 50 people) from January through March for the last few years is 20 — half of the 40 seen in January to March 2026."

"However, because more people are cognizant of fireballs and are watching out for them, the number of sightings reported to the American Meteor Society has steadily increased since the group’s public reporting system was upgraded in 2010. Instead of looking at yearly averages, Dr. Moorhead wanted to know more about the long-term trend."

"She took the reported fireball numbers for the January-to-March periods dating to 2011, made a dot on a chart for each year, and drew a trend line through the dots. It suggested that for certain years, the averages expected based on the trend line were higher than the actual averages based on reported numbers. This was particularly true for the first three months of 2022 and 2025, when the reported number of fireballs was appreciably lower than the expected average."

'The number of fireballs seen this year may seem to be far higher than the average. But in reality, it is much closer to the expected average. The number of fireballs being reported “is still high,” Dr. Moorhead said, “but not by an extreme amount,” and far from double the average.'


"In other words, Earth wasn’t bombarded by fireballs in March. 

Instead, the planet got an extra pinch of space rock seasoning."


(They're trying to explain it away 

as best they can.)


"Mr. Hankey was unconvinced by this assessment. “Our report intake has been flat for four years — the awareness growth NASA describes ended around 2020,” he wrote in an email. March, he said, had more reports than any other month in the society’s history.


“What we are seeing is not an awareness trend,” 

he said. “It is a three-to-four-week surge 

in large meteoroid activity.”


(So why is NASA so keen on explaining it away?)


"By April, the possible fireball surge had clearly ended. 

(Says who?)

"Astronomers, professional and amateur alike, are still debating March’s meteor madness — but nobody thinks anything particularly odd was happening."


(Horseshit, 

lots of people knew

and understood

this stuff isn't normal.


And find me the other guy that said:


Wednesday, February 11, 2026

I just wanna make sure I got this right...

Fast meteor over New Zealand on 1/30/26, 

3I/ATLAS, Sunspots etc...


"So expect more

superfast meteors

in the coming months, 

and I'll be waiting to see

how they are gonna 

try and explain

all of them away

when they are all 

happening in rapid succession."


Cause that same guy

 is gonna tell you:


This aint over 

not by a long shot it's not.


See here is how this works:


#1) Deny that anything unusual 

is actually happening.


#2) When it becomes plainly obvious

that something unusual 

is actually happening?


Then ust say it is already over.)


“It’s most likely just the natural ebb and flow of debris in the solar system, which is incredibly complex and incredibly random,” Mr. Hankey said.'


"Sometimes, Earth randomly receives a delivery of extra meteors. 

In March, thousands of lucky people just happened 

to get front-row seats to the cosmic fireworks."


Interesting to me that this piece comes out

 in the NYT on 4/21/26

when I had just done this blog post 


Aint anything about any of this "Normal" 

and I never heard of "Peak fireball Season"

on the same day:

Tuesday, April 21, 2026


Coincidence I am sure...

Right...gotcha...sure thing...





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