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It's a bird! It's a plane! Here's what you need to know about about that streak in the sky on Saturday night

The rocket launched from Vandenberg Space Force Base in southern California.
Credit: 12News (Kyra Trent)
SpaceX launch as seen in Arizona.

PHOENIX — SpaceX launched another round of Starlink satellites Saturday night from a California military base, giving Arizonans a spectacle in the sky.

The launch was seen across the state's skies, looking like a comet, albeit a fast-moving one.

The Falcon 9’s first-stage booster will land on the droneship ‘Of Course I Still Love You’ in the Pacific Ocean, SpaceX said.

Rockets are launched from Vandenberg Space Force Base in southern California.

Here's what people across Arizona saw on Saturday night


What is Starlink? 

Starlink is "the world's first and largest satellite constellation using a low Earth orbit to deliver broadband internet capable of supporting streaming, online gaming, video calls and more," according to the service's website.  

The "constellation" of satellites consists of thousands of satellites that orbit Earth at an altitude of about 550 km, or 341 3/4 miles.   

The satellites connect to antennas that users set up at their home to provide internet access.  

What SpaceX launches look like in Arizona 

Launches happen regularly out of California and create a light display over Arizona. 

Dr. Vishnu Reddy,  a scientist at the University of Arizona in Tucson, studies space situational awareness and basically ... knows a lot about space. 

He told 12News the reason the SpaceX rockets light up the sky is not because the engines burn brightly (although they do), it's because of something called the Twilight Phenomenon.

"The sun might have set for us here in Arizona, but it hasn't set in California," Reddy said. "So it's catching that sunlight and reflecting off."

Basically, the rocket launches far away, in California. but it goes so high that we can see it in Arizona. And when we see it, it's not in the shadow of nightfall, even though Arizona is. The "glow" is sunlight hitting the exhaust trail, even while we perceive the sky to be black.

"If you are at the top of a mountain, you can see the sunset much longer than people at the base of the mountain," Reddy said. So, think of the rocket as the top of the mountain while you're at the bottom. 

RELATED: SpaceX launches look like comets over Arizona. This is why

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