Did anyone else see a fireball in the evening sky above the high desert area of Southern California this evening at approximately 5:30? My brother just called and reported a huge bolide that travelled north to south over his house in Apple Valley, CA.
In southern California moving north to south, it’s possible that it was a launch of some sort from Vandenberg Air Force Base, rather than a natural meteor.
It wouldn’t have been ‘over’ Apple Valley, then? Vandenberg likes to shoot those things where cities aren’t, right? One teensy mistake and boy, are their faces red, and all that.
Since Vandenberg is considerably west from Apple Valley, this is highly unlikely. Not to mention that the Vandenburg launches at dusk are quite obvious, and involve rather vivid contrails heading up into the night sky, not streaking bolides.
So unless he meant that it was something he saw on the western horizon, and unless he missed the lingering vapor trail, he saw something else. Of course, he might simply have mis-described what he saw and in which case, it could have been a Vandenberg AFB launch.
A friend says he saw a bright green meteor traveling from North to South in the Western sky, just after dark, yesterday - from the Phoenix area. This would coincide with your SoCal sighting.
Edwards AFB doesn’t have any launch facilities. They have a landing strip used to land the Shuttle Orbiter and a heck of a lot of motor test stands, but no SVLFs. Classified payloads are routinely launched from VAFB and CCAFS. A “secret” space launch is essentially impossible (or at least, very difficult from a fixed launch site) owing to satellite-based ballistic missile early warning systems that would alert Russia to an unscheduled launch as a potential threat.
Spacearchive.com doesn’t list any launches this year until 04 Feb out of SLC-2 West, and a launch out of VAFB would be well west of Apple Valley in any case.
A “bright green meteor[ite]”, eh? Maybe it was these guys.