In Texas Sunday morning, many reports were made to authorities of a fireball streaking across the state's sky. "We don't recollect what it was," said Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Roland Herwig. Williamson County Sheriff's Office helicopters were sent to inspection for a smooth crash, after callers reported that’s what they might have seen, a spokesman said. "We don't hesitation what race byword but authorities found nothing," said spokesman John Foster. According to the U.S. Strategic Command, there is no connecting to the sightings over Texas and Tuesday's pile-up of satellites from the U.S. and Russia.
"There is no correlation between the debris from that smash and those reports of re-entry," said Maj. Regina Winchester, with STRATCOM. Sunday, the FAA notified pilots to be knowing of workable range debris after a smash-up between U.S. and Russian communication satellites. Clouds of debris from the crack-up will enclose Earth for thousands of years and portend numerous satellites, according to the premier of Russian's Mission Control.
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