TIME Thailand

Watch this Dash-Cam Footage of a Mysterious Fireball Blazing Over Bangkok

Was it a meteorite or space junk?

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Panic broke out in Bangkok on Monday morning after local authorities mistook an unidentified fireball for a plane crash, dispatching more than a hundred rescue workers from across the Thai capital.

Several dash-cam videos surfaced on social media shortly after the mysterious object appeared, igniting debate between astronomers and officials about the flaming debris’ origins.

While the shooting-star-like spectacle could have been a meteorite, it could also have been space junk falling from the sky, deputy director of the National Astronomical Research Institute of Thailand Saran Poshyachina told the Bangkok Post.

Worawit Tanwutthibundit, an astronomer stationed at Chachoengsao Observatory, said that the public should not be concerned either way. “The photo of the white smoke that has been shared a lot is in fact the train of smoke of a meteor,” he told Matichon newspaper. “This is a normal phenomenon.”

A representative from the Bangkok Planetarium said that typically most meteorites burn out in the atmosphere before hitting the earth.

See Impact Craters On Earth From Space

Shoemaker Impact Structure Australia Gosses Bluff Meteor Impact Crater, Northern Territory, Australia, True Colour Satellite Image Barringer impact structure meteor crater Arizona Barringer Meteor Impact Crater, Arizona, Usa, True Colour Satellite Image Acraman Meteor Impact Crater, Australia, True Colour Satellite Image Manicouagan Impact Structure Clearwater Meteor Impact Crater, Canada, True Colour Satellite Image Vredefort Meteor Impact Crate Wanapitei Lake Meteor Impact Crater satellite Lonar Meteor Impact Crater, India, True Colour Satellite Image Oasis crater libya satellite Roter Kamm meteorite crater satellite Spider Impact Crater Satellite Aorounga Meteor Impact Crater, Chad, True Colour Satellite Image Tenoumer Crater, Mauritania, True Colour Satellite Image Chesapeake Bay Meteor Impact Crater satellite
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