Leonid Meteor Shower Observation Tips
mao che minh writes "For those of us around the world planning on stepping out and witnessing the Leonid meteor showers next week (November 19th), NASA is running an article that will help you maximize your meteor shower viewing enjoyment, straight from the experts' mouths."
"make sure you are looking at the sky"
What would Brian Boitano do?
Ahh... Nothing like a hot meteor shower in the morning. =)
Of course, having to get up at 4 am isn't really my daily routine...
... to the constellation Leo the Lion
Be sure to watch out for Harry the Horse, Donald the Duck, Cleo the Camel and Tux the Penguin while sipping your cocoa!
CowboyNeal, A bottle of Vodka, A telescope, and a beowulf cluster.
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Chant the mantra - "this is not a preliminary missile attack".
All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain.
So the europeans should just get up 4:00 UT.
WTF is ut. Somebody give me the CET time.
I thought the title said "Leonard Nimoy Shower Observation Tips" I could feel my eyes trying to rip themselves from my sockets. Whew, thank god for second glances.
Quote:
""Try to get away from city lights," he suggests. "The darker the sky, the more meteors you'll see."
Of course, if you live anywhere near a city your view will be obscured by that pleasant glow of street lamps. You'll HAVE to make a trip into the countryside to see anything but the brightest of meteors. I don't mind the Moon, as it's something to look at with binoculars during quiet bits of the storm.
If you're in the UK, The Campaign For Dark Skies is an interesting site about this problem.
This image, showing the entire world's wasted light, is also intriguing. Think of all the money wasted because idiot government officials allow such wastage.
I originally read the title as "Leonard Maltin Shower Observation Tips". (cringe)
It's amazing the different ways your mind punishes you for the previous night's Guinness binge.
Is it going to be another meteor shower in a scale that we are "not going to see for several hundred years"?
I am SO on to them.
transmission_err
If the fickle weather will cooperate. Drive out to the country, pop off the t-tops and lie back =)
This advice comming from the experts who CANNOT convert Metric and Imperial measurements.
But, alas, it misses out the vital ingredients:
1) Invite ladyfriend along
2) Bring blankets (can get a bit chilly)
3) Bring whisky (see 2)
4) Remember rehearsed "Isn't it beautiful, the depth, the colours. Alas, still not a match for your eyes" lines and other "romanticisms"
5) Bring protection (see 1 + 4 + 3)
You know it makes sense.
I try to never miss one. Grab yer girl and go out and watch. In the past it's not failed to get me laid. Unfortunately, this year I'm going to be at work, so I'll get to watch, but without female companionship.
Everyone feel sorry for me now.
Work is punishment for failing to procrastinate effectively.
- Coffee, hot and lots of it
- Warm clothes and sleeping bags
- Get the hell away from the city
Jack William Bell, long-time meteor freak- -
Are you an SF Fan? Are you a Tru-Fan?
Every time I used to hear about meteor showers I would get excited. Then I would stay up (would stay up coding anyway) for it and what do you see? nothing. I'm guessing that like all the other apparent showers, we're going to see nothing spectacular. Remember, go out any night of the week and you'll see meterorites.
Btw, this we know is going to happen, Australia and Africa are going to get a partial solar eclipse on the 4th of December. http://www.assa.org.au/observing/eclipse2002/
Analytic & algebraic topology of locally Euclidean meterization of infinitely differentiable Riemmanian manifold
a meteor cluster.
:p
made you look
Hey, they left off the most important step for me! Get out of the Pacific Northwest, go somewhere you can see the sky.
Oh well, I can always pretend the raindrops are comets.
Erik
YOU ARE SAYING IMPUDENCE TO ME! THAT IS IMPUDENCE!
This time im being prepared!
A Rocket just like Hans Zarkov made.. just incase these babies get too close!
Oh sure, your laughing now.. im not sharing my moon rocket with anyone!
-- If at first you don't succeed, lie!
"You'll never see anything if you go out on the wrong day," deadpans Cooke.
"It can get cold in November at 3 o'clock in the morning."
"Try to get away from city lights," he suggests. "The darker the sky, the more meteors you'll see."
Gee, thanks. I never would have guessed.
Erik
YOU ARE SAYING IMPUDENCE TO ME! THAT IS IMPUDENCE!
these things would happen in the middle of the day so we didn't have to wake up at three in the morning to see them!
-- Many men would appreciate a woman's mind more if they could fondle it
important point! that, and the moon issue It's a shame the moon is nearly full that night, though. ...is why I'll be doing my observing closer to sunday or monday if the weather cooperates...
"...is the time on your watch where you live."
Thanks for putting that straight, oh wise guy!
use a telescope or a really good highly polished ashtray.
go out at night - most stars are better viewed when dark outside.
point the telescope up towards the sky. (pointing it downward is a common beginner's mistake)
don't be afraid to contact NASA and suggest names for stars you've seen. Chances are that no one else has seen it since there are so many stars in the sky.
I saw the shower last year and it was incredible. We saw hundreds if not thousands of meteors. At some points, you couldn't look anywhere in the sky and *not* see a meteor. It was truly amazing. If this year is half as good as last year, it should be pretty cool.
However, no matter how many meteors there are and how often they come, it seems to be VERY difficult to capture them on film. Using an SLR camera with a cable release and a tripod, a friend and I used something like 5 rolls of films and probably only got 15-20 usable pictures that had meteors in. (You can check them out here at peterswift.org. And they weren't joking about light pollution either! We were pretty far out in the country in North Central PA at Camp Susque, but even the lights from a tiny town with one gas station and a restaraunt really made a lot of the pictures have big bright spots (and the town/village was about 3-4 miles away!).
The anti-salmon
Oh, and btw, my .sig is a joke. You can't take it seriously as I think some have.
The sat operators have been told to close down non-essential systems and to reorientate themselves to present a minimal profile to the showers.
NASA has posted a little Palm OS applet to aid people who want to try counting the meteor rate.
You can find it here.
And information about it over on Space.com.
In illa quae ultra sunt
Mod next level up! +5 Insightful
messier! ROFLMAO
....new hardware is always a treat.
--
Sometimes you just gotta unplug....
I think I'm going to skip this one...
:(
My local weather forecast:
Greater Vancouver: Issued 5.00 AM pst Friday 15 November 2002
Today..Cloudy with 60 percent chance of rain. Rain developing this afternoon. High 11.
Tonight..Periods of rain. Windy near the water. Low 8.
Saturday..Rain heavy at times. Wind southeast 30 to 50 km/h near the water. High 12.
Sunday..Periods of rain. Low 7. High 12.
Monday..Rain. Windy. Low 9. High 12.
Tuesday..Rain. Windy. Low 8. High 11.
Normals for the period..Low 3. High 9.
Looks about par for the course. Maybe some of you can post some nice pictures of the Leonids for me somewhere.
It's only software!
DO NOT look directly at the meteor shower. This is very dangerous. To do so, you will risk becoming blind, turning into a giant walking vegetable and destroying your neighbors. Remember "Day of the Triffids".
"Gentlemen, you can't fight in here! This is the War Room!" -- Dr. Strangelove
Wondering if anyone can tell me what equipment do I need to watch the meteor shower?
I want to take pictures of the night.
Any preparation is needed??
Casting aside my Mod powers...
I've seen several applications over the years that use a shortwave radio hooked up to a computer (I've seen C64 and recently a PC version) used to count the hits by meteors in the upper atmosphere. I forget the links though I'll have to do a search. Just thought I'd mention it now beforeI forget.
Now if there was a CF card for my PDA that could do that...ahh that would be cool.
Now wouldn't this be the true geek way instead of actually going outside?!?!
Listen up, NASA; next year, schedule the Leonids for a more reasonable time. Say, 10PM.
We're going to get a 'Storm' this year because we're hitting an old meteor tail dead-on. Every 33 years or so, the Earth will go straight through the center of the particle cloud, rather than just skimming it. Also, if you're planning on checking this out before midnight, forget it -- you have to wait till the Earth rotates into the cloud of sand-like particles. Be ready; in 1833, the storm was so intense that it looked like rain (see pic).
I'm a meteor
Leonid
The Leonids shower usually peaks at about that time every year. This year though, there are a couple of storm peaks predicted.
The storms are caused by specific trails of ice and dust left by the comet, and the Earth is expected to go near those trails slightly later than the regular Leonids shower peak. This is why the predictions you're hearing are slightly later than the regular date.
The only reason im going to see it is im getting up to go deer hunting next weekend (dont knock it till you try it, uless your a vegetatrian, then some complaining is ok). if you happen to be up, take a look, it really is spectacular
Even the HIGHEST prediction is "only" 1200 per hour. While this is a superb shower, it does not qualify as a storm. The moon, as noted, will wash out the fainter ones.
Meteor prediction is a young and inexact science, so don't plan on setting your alarm for the exact time of the peak and then seeing it. Go out early and stay late!
Great page here at space.com.
I'm hoping for CLEAR SKIES!
***General Consultant to the Human Race*** My opinions are free. You get what you pay for.
...look for the space station, too
stay up.