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The Lyrids Are Coming!

SeaDour writes "The year's first meteor shower, the Lyrids, will peak in the pre-dawn hours of April 22nd when the Earth plows through the debris trail of Comet Thatcher at a relative velocity of 49 km/s (110,000 mph). Lyrids usually aren't as numerous as other showers (such as the famed Leonids), but they're well-known for their spectacular tails; you can expect to see about 5-20 meteors per hour, depending on the severity of your local light pollution. Unfortunately, my current location in the midwest under stormy skies puts me at a bit of a disposition, but hopefully some other Slashdotters can share their observations with us tomorrow."

4 of 186 comments (clear)

  1. A bit of a disposition? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Unfortunately, my current location in the midwest under stormy skies puts me at a bit of a disposition,

    Wow, that's really condition. I feel really emotion for you, salutation. Perhaps the condition will become adjective, and you'll be affected.

  2. So THAT'S what those things were!?! by Gunfighter · · Score: 5, Funny

    I think I saw a few of those suckers streaking across the sky a night or two ago. It was the first time I'd seen more than one "shooting star" in a night. I guess I was wrong. It's not an extraterrestrial planetary attack plan in progress.

    /me removes tinfoil hat

    --
    -- Stu

    /. ID under 2,000. I feel old now.
  3. Re:Suggested Camera Settings? by Gunark · · Score: 5, Informative

    With most digital cameras you will get a lot of static in your image. I tried doing this with my Olympus C-3030 during the 2002 Leonoids, and my pictures turned out terrible -- more static than anything else.

    As far as I know film is the way to go for long exposures.

    (There's actually a way to eliminate at least some of the static if you're crafty with Photoshop -- the static tends to show up on the same pixels on you camera's CCD, so if you take one fully dark photo you can use it to substract the static in subsequent pictures).

  4. Lyrids? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    That's a relief. At first I thought it was the Lurids -- a different meteor shower which is too graphic and disturbing to watch and definitely Not Safe For Work.