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XSpirit
@TubeSpirit
During the live broadcast of the Mayon volcano eruption in the Philippines, a bright bolide – a meteor – streaked across the sky directly behind the volcano’s cone. It was a beautiful and rare coincidence: the fiery trail of the meteor against the backdrop of glowing lava and ash clouds.
Immediately afterward, something even more intriguing occurred: a second object appeared on the video, moving upward along the volcano’s slope. This moment quickly went viral and sparked a wave of discussions – from enthusiastic “wow, how beautiful” reactions to conspiracy theories about UFOs, aliens, or even the volcano sending a “response signal” to space.
In reality, the first phenomenon was a classic meteor (or bolide). Such bright fireballs occur when a larger meteoroid enters the atmosphere at high speed and burns up due to friction. According to the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (PHIVOLCS), the object completely disintegrated in the upper layers of the atmosphere and did not reach the surface. There was no impact on the slope – initial reports of a “strike” were exaggerated due to the camera angle.
As for the second object that appeared to be “ascending,” there are several possible explanations. It could have been:
a piece of rocket debris or a satellite
an airplane in the background
an optical effect from the camera or reflection
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simply another meteor fragment that looked like it was rising due to perspective
Unusual atmospheric phenomena are sometimes recorded around volcanoes due to high temperatures, electrical discharges (volcanic lightning), and dense ash clouds, which make the air behave unpredictably. Additionally, Mayon is one of the most symmetrical and photogenic volcanoes in the world, so any celestial object nearby looks truly epic.
This is a wonderful example of how nature loves to put on real shows. The coincidence of a meteor and an active volcano is rare, but not miraculous. Such events remind us how vulnerable we are and how amazing the Universe is: rocks from space fall every day, while volcanoes constantly remind us that Earth is a living organism.
🚨During the live broadcast of the Mayon volcano eruption in the Philippines, a bright bolide – a meteor – streaked across the sky directly behind the volcano’s cone. It was a beautiful and rare coincidence: the fiery trail of the meteor against the backdrop of glowing lava and… pic.twitter.com/7jppwdd2mZ
— XSpirit (@TubeSpirit) May 26, 2026
Source(s):
• https://x.com/TubeSpirit/status/2059159404390342811
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