Viral video of rising light after meteor streaks past erupting Philippine volcano sparks alien frenzy but scientist has an explanation

A viral video of a meteor darting past an erupting Philippine volcano sent the internet into an alien frenzy after an unknown object was seen rising from the earth after impact — but a renowned scientist says there’s a perfectly logical explanation.The clip, posted by Afar.TV on YouTube shows Mount Mayon on Luzon Island mid-eruption around 10:30 p.m.on May 25, when a vivid green fireball streaks across the frame and impacts behind the volcano.Moments later, as orange lava lit up the slopes, a smaller white light appeared to rise from the area where the meteor was last seen before disappearing behind the volcano.The small white object immediately sent the internet spiraling over whether something had crash-landed and emerged from the volcano.However, Harvard University astrophysicist Avi Loeb told NewsNation on Saturday that the object seen after the meteor impact was unrelated to extraterrestrial activity and was most likely a satellite passing in orbit.“The light coming up is most likely the glint from a satellite reflecting sunlight,” Loeb said.
“There are more than 10,000 communications satellites moving around the Earth, so it’s not very unlikely to see such a thing.”Loeb added that the white light seen rising from the earth had nothing to do with the meteor, and it was simply a coincidence that a satellite reflected sunlight at the same moment and location where the meteor struck.Loeb also heads the Galileo Project, which searches for signs of extraterrestrial technological signatures, and noted that satellites pose a major issue for his work.“They present light in the sky, and there are lots of streaks that are observed in exposures from astronomical observatories,” he said.Another expert said the meteor most likely never hit the ground, burning up in the atmosphere before impact.“It is possible, but not likely, this produced a meteorite,” physicist Peter Brown of Western University in Canada told the New York Times.“My bet, particula...