Fireball Passes by Mount Fuji Stratovolcano in Japan | Earth Science
Photographer "Daichi Fujii": "This is a photograph of the fireball that occurred at 9:05:27pm on February 1, 2026, taken from Mt. Fuji. I got a hole-in-one at the Hoei crater. Recently, every month, a bright fireball has been captured seemingly overlapping with Mt. Fuji."
In astronomy, fireballs, also known as bolides, are exceptionally bright meteors that, like all meteors, heat up when they enter Earth's atmosphere at high velocities and leave a trail of glowing material in the sky. Meteors are classified as fireballs when they shine brighter than the planets—an apparent magnitude of –4 or brighter.
A fireball is a very bright meteor—one at least as bright as Venus and possibly brighter than even a full Moon. Fireballs are rare—if you see one you are likely to remember it for your whole life. Physically, a fireball is a small rock that originated from an asteroid or comet that typically leaves a fading smoke trail of gas and dust as it shoots through the Earth's atmosphere. It is unlikely that any single large ground strike occurred—much of the rock likely vaporized as it broke up into many small pieces.
Learn more about Fireballs:
https://cneos.jpl.nasa.gov/fireballs/
Date: Feb 1, 2026
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