Security camera catchs the sound of the drop.
This sound of Alka, which hit the ground, could be the first sound in the video via a security camera in Canada.
- A Canadian man survived a collision with Alka by hitting a porch in front of him in Charlotte Town on Prince Edward.
- The name of Charlotte Town Metorite was imprisoned by a bell -beating camera by the house owner’s door.
- Researchers confirmed that the item was an alka and noted its rareness, saying that ‘no other alkali has been documented.’
There are new details about the journey from an Alka space to Earth, which was captured in the video last year.
The owner of a Canadian home, who survived the collision with Validam and his dog space, which collided with a speed of about 125 miles per hour from the front porch and was suppressed by the effect. Validam’s home is located in Charlotte Town, the capital of Prince Edward Island on the east coast of Canada.
“The shocking thing for me is that I was standing there a few minutes before this effect,” Valeym said in a statement. Interview With Canadian News Broadcaster CBC News. “If I had seen it, I would probably have stood there, it would probably have made me half.”
The doorbell camera at the Validam door imprisoned a surprising series of incidents, including his voice for colliding with Alka’s walkway.
The video shows the effects of fast moving Alka.
Researchers study Alka’s remains.
Validam, who was curious about the beginning of a deep gray powder near his walkway, collected some samples of the remains and submitted them to a researcher. Alberta University.
Chris Herd, Science Professor and Curator of the University’s Metorite Collection confirmed that the powder was actually from an alka. Herd traveled to Prince Edward Island so that he could check the remains of Alka and collect some pieces and become part of the Alka collection.
“As the first and only Alka from the province of PEI, Charlotte Town Metorite certainly announced his arrival in a brilliant way. Herd said in a statement that no other alka has been docuted, not documenting. “It adds a new dimension to the natural history of the island.”
According to the University of Alberta, the space rock, called Charlotte Town Metorite, is a “ordinary” condite, a rocky alka that has small mineral grains, whose properties help to say that this land Why was it broken after collision, according to Alberta University.
Falling from space: When the space trash falls to the ground and causes damage or injury, who plays?
Can anyone hit an alka?
Only one case has been reported in the United States to collide with Alka, but there are several records – whether it be rumors or certified cases – Alka injures or killing animals.
Ann Hu Joz was blinking on his sofa in November 1954, Silaka, near Alabama, when a grape -shaped rock came from the roof, his radio hit and hit him. He had a dirty injury and nerves to hesitated but he was otherwise undergoing non -damage, according to a post Alabama University.
Some of the millions of pounds of items left by humans in the space and space have not yet done anything more than minor injuries or damage.
A Florida family filed a lawsuit against NASA last year when a spacecraft from a palette of batteries used from the International Space Station flew from the roof, damaging their home.
The chances of a rock or trash falling from the space are very low because there are mostly small pieces that will potentially burn in the atmosphere before they can cause severe damage.
Cooperation: Jeanin Santoki and David Strategy, USA Today