Close Menu
thewitness.com.au
  • Home
  • Latest
  • National News
  • International News
  • Sports
  • Business & Economy
  • Politics
  • Technology
  • Entertainment

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

What's Hot

Footy stars Nick Daicos, Dustin Martin, James Sicily were targeted by AI slop. This is the financial motive behind it

June 14, 2026

New tool for admissions centre helps year 10, 11 and 12 students plan university pathways

June 14, 2026

Are voters prepared for One Nation leader to run the country?

June 14, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Threads
thewitness.com.au
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Subscribe
  • Home
  • Latest
  • National News
  • International News
  • Sports
  • Business & Economy
  • Politics
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
thewitness.com.au
Home»Latest»Meteor NSW: Comet was likely 30-50cm in size, why it went unnoticed
Latest

Meteor NSW: Comet was likely 30-50cm in size, why it went unnoticed

info@thewitness.com.auBy info@thewitness.com.auMay 22, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
Meteor NSW: Comet was likely 30-50cm in size, why it went unnoticed
Share
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Threads Bluesky Copy Link


For a brief moment on Thursday night, a tiny rock approximately the size of a microwave turned up unannounced somewhere near our galaxy.

Sydney’s cloudy evening sky turned white, with surf cams on the eastern suburbs showing the sky turn completely white in a giant flash. Other angles showed a gigantic mass of light coursing through the clouds at breakneck speed.

The abrupt event left anyone lucky enough to be gazing east at 6.50pm in total shock. Social media exploded with people initially fearing a plane crash or missiles. There was even a bit of optimistic UFO chatter.

Normally astronomers are all over this stuff, warning of the tiniest observable movement for space-heads to set their alarms to.

But for this one … nothing.

It served as a lovely reminder that we are just vulnerable little microorganisms hurtling through the abyss, on a relatively small chunk of rock at risk of colliding with other pieces of deadly, intergalactic phenomena.

While all that might sound a bit unnerving, there’s an explanation behind the astonishingly tiny meteor that gatecrashed everyone’s evening without notice.

ANU astrophysicist Dr Brad Tucker said the object may have been just “30 to 50 centimetres in size based on the brightness”, potentially smaller than your TV.

The sheer speed it was travelling was enough to light up the sky from Sydney to Canberra and beyond.

Meteors hit Earth’s atmosphere at tens of thousands of kilometres an hour. At those speeds, even a small object carries enough energy to superheat the air around it, fragment mid-flight and produce a brilliant flash far larger than the rock itself would suggest.

Dr Tucker said the bright flash likely showed the object breaking apart, while the green-blue colour pointed to metals such as iron and nickel.

“People started to see this bright fireball, and then all of a sudden they got this bright flash happening,” he said.

“Enough pressure builds up with all the friction and pressure … it causes it to fracture.”

Why wasn’t it spotted earlier?

The meteor slipped through because objects this small are incredibly hard to spot before they hit the atmosphere.

NASA-backed systems such as ATLAS are designed to detect larger near-Earth objects, with ATLAS saying it can see a roughly 20-metre asteroid several days out and a 100-metre asteroid several weeks out.

Sydney’s meteor, by contrast, was likely too small to register.

That puts it in the very annoying category of space rocks that are too small, too dim and too fast to reliably detect in advance, but still big enough to produce a spectacular atmospheric light show when they finally rock up.

Much larger objects have slipped through before. Sometimes violently.

The Chelyabinsk meteor that exploded over Russia in 2013 was roughly 17 to 20 metres wide, injured about 1500 people mostly through shattered glass, and still arrived without warning.

NASA would later describe it as a “cosmic wake-up call”. Because that meteor came from near the direction of the Sun, ground-based telescopes struggled to see the incoming phenomenon.

That charming little blind spot remains one of the great awkward truths of astronomy.

The European Space Agency openly admits that there are “an unknown number of asteroids on paths we cannot track hidden in the glare of our Sun”.

While it might seem outlandish and sci-fi, global powers actually spend quite a bit on planetary defence.

NASA’s future NEO Surveyor is one of the latest examples. The mission has been specifically designed to help detect asteroids approaching from the Sun’s direction that were once invisible on the ground.

So while Sydney’s meteor looked enormous, it was certainly nowhere near a city-killer

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest Bluesky Threads Tumblr Telegram Email
info@thewitness.com.au
  • Website

Related Posts

Footy stars Nick Daicos, Dustin Martin, James Sicily were targeted by AI slop. This is the financial motive behind it

June 14, 2026

New tool for admissions centre helps year 10, 11 and 12 students plan university pathways

June 14, 2026

Are voters prepared for One Nation leader to run the country?

June 14, 2026
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Demo
Top Posts

Byron Bay psychedelic guru accused of strangling wife Kira-Tara Razam

June 6, 20264,239 Views

NRL Highlights: Cowboys v Dolphins – Round 14

June 6, 2026741 Views

Police believe ‘Penthouse Syndicate’ built Sydney property empire from defrauded millions

September 24, 2025362 Views
Don't Miss

Footy stars Nick Daicos, Dustin Martin, James Sicily were targeted by AI slop. This is the financial motive behind it

By info@thewitness.com.auJune 14, 2026

SaveYou have reached your maximum number of saved items.Remove items from your saved list to…

New tool for admissions centre helps year 10, 11 and 12 students plan university pathways

June 14, 2026

Are voters prepared for One Nation leader to run the country?

June 14, 2026

Systemic sexism is ingrained in Australia’s medical system harming women and girls

June 14, 2026
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • TikTok
  • WhatsApp
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
Top Trending
Demo
Most Popular

Byron Bay psychedelic guru accused of strangling wife Kira-Tara Razam

June 6, 20264,239 Views

NRL Highlights: Cowboys v Dolphins – Round 14

June 6, 2026741 Views

Police believe ‘Penthouse Syndicate’ built Sydney property empire from defrauded millions

September 24, 2025362 Views
Our Picks

Footy stars Nick Daicos, Dustin Martin, James Sicily were targeted by AI slop. This is the financial motive behind it

June 14, 2026

New tool for admissions centre helps year 10, 11 and 12 students plan university pathways

June 14, 2026

Are voters prepared for One Nation leader to run the country?

June 14, 2026

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
  • Home
© 2026 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.