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A Hong Kong resident captured a striking luminous object racing across the south‑western sky above Mong Kok at about 3.30am on 5th June, slicing through cloud before vanishing into the night. Responding to enquiries, the Hong Kong Observatory said the object's brightness, shape and high speed were consistent with a typical fireball meteor, though no formal sightings were logged.

Fireballs are unusually bright meteors. In astronomical terms, some define them as meteors brighter than magnitude −3 — a level that outshines Jupiter and even Venus — which explains why they stand out so vividly after dark.

Like ordinary meteors, fireballs occur when fragments of space debris plunge into Earth's atmosphere and glow through intense frictional heating. Their extra brilliance usually points to larger pieces of material, such as stony fragments or small asteroid shards, and they can burn for longer than standard shooting stars.

Colours seen during a fireball's passage arise from different chemical elements within the object — for example iron, nickel or sodium — each producing distinct spectral emissions at high temperatures. If a fireball is particularly large and skims the atmosphere at lower altitude, it may also be accompanied by audible phenomena.