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Geminid Meteor Shower

Target Practice writes "Is it an asteroid? Is it a comet? Who cares? According to Sky and Telescope's website, 3200 Phaethon has been spewing chunks into our atmosphere for the past 150 years, and tonight, after the lan party, you can step outside at two or three A.M. and see the best light show yet - topping off at 75 meteors per hour! Be there..." Space.com has another story.

14 of 184 comments (clear)

  1. i fell for that last time by thnmnt · · Score: 5, Funny

    yeah, 75 per hour. right, like i'll fall for that again! i was the shmuck standing around at 5am for the leonids only to see maybe 10.

    find some other chump.

    --
    Go read some bible: nubible.com
  2. Weather Accepting, of Course by MyHair · · Score: 4, Funny

    It's SNOWING where I am, you insensitive clod!

  3. 1.4 yr long orbit, interesting by peculiarmethod · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'm no astronomer, but isnt it interesting in the least that the orbit is so close to earths with such a similiar length in orbit? Should not the trajectory/composition/dating be studied for maybe relevance in say, the formation of the moon or other interesting local phenomena?

    pm

    --
    ** "It's not my job to stand between the people talking to me, and the ones listening to me." -- Pego the Jerk
  4. Moon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    One thing better than the Leonids last month: The moon will be only 70% full tonight, and it'll set earlier.

    The bad thing is, it's not as spectacular a show as the Leonids, all things being equal.

  5. Re:Hmm by garcia · · Score: 5, Informative

    it's growing awareness. The news would barely report it. *IF* they did it was a small blurb by the weather man or some other meaningless non-sense.

    Now we have news.google.com and www.slashdot.org to tell us every last thing that happens that is of importance to dorks...

  6. Some more info by maggard · · Score: 5, Informative
    Just to be a bit more realistic we're talking about one trail per minute or so. While that's nice to see when laying on one's back next to someone you like, or just for the thrill of it if you're into astronomy, it's not enough to get most folks off their couches. Considering also it's mid-winter in the northern hemisphere the viewership is likely somewhat limited.

    As to "are there more of these?" Nope. We have had a few spectacular shows in the past few years but nothing statistically unusual or anything more then wider reporting and slightly more accurate predictions.

    Usual tips apply: Get out of the city, away from parking-lot lights, hills help block glare, let your eyes adjust, remember that a clear sky is COLD, binoculars are useless for this but entertaining for looking at other things like nebula and Jupiter's moons, look up online for tips regarding astrophotography and no your camera flash won't help...

    --
    I don't read ACs: If a post isn't worth so much as a nom de plume to its author then I wont bother either.
  7. After the LAN party? by DeadMoose · · Score: 5, Funny

    after the lan party, you can step outside at two or three A.M.

    Two or three AM? What kind of wimpy LAN parties do you have?

  8. Re:Hmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    Growing awareness... and from what I've seen, a growing tendency to announce them in news and on the web.

    The same meteor showers happen about the same time every year. You can go out next year in mid-december and watch the Geminids all over again.

    The only difference between them is their intensity. The Leonids, for example, has a 33-year cycle of peak activity, which is why the last two have been pretty intense.

    I dug up this link with a small primer on meteor shower in general. There's probably much better ones out there.

  9. Peak time by pandrel · · Score: 5, Informative

    According to the Article Peak activity is projected around 4 a.m. EST (1 a.m. PST) with ideal dark-sky conditions, at least 60 to 120 Geminid meteors can be expected to burst across the sky every hour. They will be hitting Earth's Atmosphere at 22 miles per minute.. Insane..

  10. Not just you... by freejung · · Score: 4, Funny

    Actually, there have been more meteor showers lately. This is obviously the beginning of an attack by the dread meteoric weapons of the planet Zarquon. Of course, now that you've found them out, they'll have to come up with some other ploy...

    1. Re:Not just you... by WeaponOfChoice · · Score: 4, Funny

      damn, foiled again...

      Not to worry, our next plan's a doozy - planting a maniac at the helm of the worlds most powerful country...

      --


      It's not that I'm Anti-American - I'm Pro-Freedom
  11. After last year's Leonids, it's hard to go out by btempleton · · Score: 4, Informative

    I used to go out regularly for showers, usually the Perseids. It's usually too cold for the Geminids.

    But after last year's Leonids, where I got a 7,000/hour rate -- 2 per second for a sustained 15 minutes -- in Japan, it's hard to go out for the regular showers again, where even witha claimed rate of 75/hour you are likely to see fewer without the best conditions.

    Pictures are here and here for 2002.

    Even this year's show, which got up to 600/hour at the peak,and thus the 2nd best show in my experience, was a letdown.

    Of course, I missed the 1966 show, being too young. Joe Haldeman saw it and told me it was like standing on the bridge of the Enterprise and watching the stars go by. He said for the first time he really could understand how he was standing on a planet moving in space.

    But that was an estimated 70,000 per hour rate.

    We won't see that again from the Leonids for about 97 years, if we see it then. It is possible another surprise show could come now that they are getting better at predicting, but I doubt it.

    So yes, the past few years have shown an abundance of good shows. There was also a good Perseids show in the mid 90s, about 300/hour just after its comet went by. But the show is over for now, and I doubt the Geminids rate a /. headline.

    --
    Has it been over a year since you last donated to the Electronic Frontier Foundation
  12. light pollution SUCKS by io333 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I remember when the orange streetlamps started to be installed in the 70's. Before that, all streetlamps were of the bluish variety and gave very little light pollution. I have no idea why they all use orange ones now, I guess they are cheaper? I think the orange ones are called "sodium vapor."

    I wish we could go back to blue, or at least redesign the orange ones so that they don't shine so much light into the sky. I remember as a kid looking up and seeing the milky way. Now I'm lucky if I manage to see Jupiter through the orange haze.

    Three or four years ago, the head of the planetarium and observatory in Bradenton, FL was arrested while shooting out streetlamps near the observatory with a shotgun. I totally understand that guy. He was just fed up.

    1. Re:light pollution SUCKS by io333 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      If you dont like it, you could always get your ass into the car, drive for a half hour in any given direction, and watch your stars.

      Ha! More like 12 hours and then some. Have you ever tried to catch a whisp of distant nebula with an amateur telescope? It was easy to do in the 70's and is now often impossible. What a shame. It is more or less impossible to find a dark sky anywhere in the U.S. anymore. In fact, only 1 % of the US population lives under a dark sky today!