Doorbell camera captures sound of meteorite strike in Canada
Scientists were in awe of the incident, claiming it was the first time the sound and footage of a meteorite strike were captured together.
A couple returned home to a burst of debris on their walkway. Their home security camera revealed it was a meteorite hitting Earth.
Doorbell cameras aren’t just for busting home invaders and porch pirates. A Ring camera captured the sound of a meteorite crash-landing near a house in Prince Edward Island, Canada, marking the first time this interstellar noise had been recorded alongside video footage.
The University of Alberta has confirmed that the Charlottetown meteorite is classified as an ordinary chondrite—though its discovery is anything but ordinary.
Joe Velaidum's home security camera captured the instant a meteorite smashed against his home's brick walkway. The video is thought to be the first recorded sound of a meteorite's direct impact.
A meteorite crash-landed on his home’s walkway. Hoping to confirm what he saw on his camera, Velaidum sent his home security video and pictures to Chris Herd, an expert in meteorites at the University of Alberta. Herd confirmed that it was indeed a meteorite and that it was a history-making moment.
Sound and video of a meteorite was caught by a Ring doorbell camera in the Atlantic Canada province of P.E.I. last July. Scientists believe it’s the first footage of its kind.
and it’s believed to be the first footage and sound of a meteorite landing on Earth – and the first reported and confirmed space rock to fall in the Maritimes. That’s according to Chris Herd ...
According to expert Chris Herd, it's an "ordinary chondrite," the most common kind of meteoriteHave you ever wondered what a meteorite hitting Earth sounds like?Last July, Joe Velaidum and Laura Kelly,
Herd discovered that the sample was chondrite, the most common type of space rock that strikes Earth, and that it likely originated from the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. The footage is believed to be the first time that both sound and visuals of a meteorite strike have ever been recorded. Herd told CBC News
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