© YouTube/Meteors
A bright meteor fireball was filmed flying over the province of Albacete, Spain. Video footage was uploaded to YouTube by 'Meteors' on January 27:
The meteor on this video was recorded over Spain on 2019 January 27 at 0:22 local time (equivalent to 23:22 universal time on Jan. 26). It was generated by a rock from a comet that hit the atmosphere at about 80,000 km/h. It began over the province of Albacete at an altitude of about 97 km, and ended at a height of around 65 km.
The event was recorded in the framework of the SMART project (University of Huelva), operated by the Southwestern Europe Meteor Network (SWEMN), from the meteor-observing stations located at La Hita (Toledo), Calar Alto (Almeria), La Sagra (Granada) and Sevilla.
There is no logical reason that big bolides should be spaced about 24 hours apart on the same path so that they routinely hit over the same place for days in a row.* But I know I've seen headlines like that on SOTT.
That kind of stuff 'macro scale' stuff seems inexplicable given our 'knowledge' of our universe and that inexplicability seems rather analogous to the inexplicability found in Quantum Mechanics. (This is where I am guessing that such events most likely cause is to be found in the wisdom of hybridized view pf Schrödinger''s 'cat'/'cockroach', Heisenberg's uncertainly priciple, with pinches of Charles Fort and John Keel thrown in; but that's all based on 'feel', not on what little physics I might have learned.) See, e.g.:
Physicists create a flying army of laser Schrödinger's cats
A laser pulse bounced off a rubidium atom and entered the quantum world - taking on the weird physics of "Schrödinger's cat." Then another one did the same thing. Then another. The laser pulses...R C.
*I recognize the fact that once a big bolide is observed; the likelihood of other bolides being seen at goes up; but that fact can't really account for the repeated hits that Spain? - or wherever such has recently and repeatedly occurred - has witnessed.
RC