Dec 1883
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=1883natur..29..123f&link_type=abstract
Nature, Volume 29, Issue 736, pp. 123 (1883).
Physics
Scientific paper
As your columns frequently contain notices of meteors, I may mention that I observed one of unusual brilliancy last night (November 28) at 10.50. It appeared in the constellation Taurus, and, following the line of the ecliptic, disappeared about five to ten degrees above the eastern horizon. The meteor was visible for not less than fifteen seconds, had a brilliant train or cone of light of from two to three degrees in length, and outshone Jupiter, near which it passed. From the slow, angular movement of the meteor I feel certain that the train was not an optical impression, but a real luminous object.
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