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| A Lyrid meteor streaks over Earth on the night of April 22, 2012. [Credit: NASA/JSC/D. Pettit] |
The image is rotated so that the north celestial pole (NCP) is roughly in the up direction. The lights of Florida are clearly seen above and to the right of the meteor. Cuba, the Florida Keys and the eastern Gulf Coast shoreline are also visible. Some brilliant flashes of lightning are also prevalent in the image.
A movie of a International Space Station's pass over Earth on the night of April 22, 2012, during the peak of the Lyrid meteor shower -- a composite of 316 still frames seen during the flyby [Credit: NASA]
Cooke and his team from the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., are hoping to combine the data from these images with their ground observations and possible Lyrid views from a balloon camera launched to observe the Lyrids on the same night. This will hopefully produce simultaneous space/ground imagery of one or more meteors, which can be used to test ideas and algorithms for processing data gathered by future space-based meteor observatories.
Source: NASA [May 18, 2012]






