Halley's Comet's Debris Is Hitting Earth Tonight — But Something Is Off

Опубликовано: 16 Июнь 2026
на канале: The Sky Lab
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Tonight, Earth moves through a trail of ancient debris left behind by Halley’s Comet—particles older than recorded history, entering our atmosphere at nearly 148,000 miles per hour. This is the Eta Aquariid meteor shower, one of the fastest and most predictable celestial events we observe every year.

But this year isn’t unfolding like the others.

For months, something has been building in the background. A statistically rare spike in fireball reports. Events appearing where they shouldn’t. A tracking system quietly shown to have gaps—sometimes placing impacts hundreds or even thousands of miles off their true location. Individually, each piece has an explanation. Together, they raise a harder question.

Because tonight isn’t just another meteor shower.

It’s a moment where a known, mapped, repeatable stream intersects with a sky that hasn’t been behaving the way we expect. And when you step outside and look up, watching streaks of light cut across the dark… you’re not just seeing Halley’s debris.

You’re seeing everything entering Earth’s atmosphere at the same time.

The problem is—those things don’t come labeled.

This video breaks down what we know, what we don’t, and why this particular night might matter more than it seems. Not as a prediction, but as a test.

A test of whether the sky still matches the models we trust… or whether something else has been slipping through unnoticed.

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