Perseid Meteor Shower Peaks Tonight With Up To 200 Meteors Per Hour (latimes.com)
The Perseid meteor shower happens ever year in August, but this year it will be especially spectacular with twice as many shooting stars streaking across the night sky. Los Angeles Times reports: "In past years, stargazers would have seen up to one meteor each minute, on average, in a very dark sky. But this year, there's even more reason to stay up late or crawl out of bed in the middle of the night. 'We're expecting 160 to 200 meteors per hour,' said Bill Cooke, head of NASA's Meteoroid Environment Office. This year's 'outburst' of shooting stars was set into motion more than a year ago, when Jupiter passed closer than usual to the stream of dusty debris left in the wake of the comet Swift-Tuttle. Jupiter's gravity field tugged a large clump of the tiny particles closer to Earth's eventual path. These intense displays happen once a decade or so, Cooke said. The next one won't be until 2027 or 2028." The best viewing experience will be away from the city. Since it takes roughly 30-45 minutes for your eyes to adjust to the darkness, it's recommended you don't pull out your smartphone or excessively shine your flashlight around. The Los Angeles Times has a neat infographic of the Perseid meteor shower.
Sounds like they're expecting 3 times as many, not 2.
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For the past decade - the area I live in in Illinois is clouded over during the show. Like tonight.
Frustrating to say the least..
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Where and when can I watch this . . . like in central Europe?
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That's just 0.2 kilometeors per hour.
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A meteor shower is not a meteor storm. Meteor showers get way more media attention than they deserve.
Astronomically speaking there are far more exciting things to do with your time that are more convenient. Borrow a decent telescope for a month.
I for one have no desire to get out of bed at the time I'm most sleepy, travel from my big city to somewhere where the night sky is half way decent, to see three meteors a minute, each of which is only in the sky for a few seconds, if I am lucky. That's an average of rather less than 1 meteor in the sky at any one time.
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IMO, an hour's drive out of town in the middle of the night is a great opportunity to behold the naked, starry skies and see three whole meteors a minute, when you normally see a small handful of stars in the sky and a meteor a week. A night trip to unplug and get away from it all doesn't wreck your cycle any worse than a night of getting wasted at home/at a party.
Of course, some light planning is advised. Some websites to check:
-a light pollution map to find a suitable location. Hopefully you live an hour away from a blue zone
-weather local to the area to make sure you don't have too many clouds to spoil the show
-a moon calendar; if the phase is anything more than a crescent, then also check...
-moonset and moonrise times, and plan to arrive in-between those times (during the night, of course)
Also not a bad idea to bring a lawn chair, layers/blankets, and refreshments
Happy meteor-gazing!
We wanted to go out yesterday, but the sky was a complete overcast. Looks like the same today. It's such a shame, really. I've seen them before and it was magnificent.
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Since when shooting long distance electrodes in the pineal and pituitary gland of the recently deceased has ever solved anything?
As is typical with highly hyped events, the clouds rolled in predictably. And when they cleared around the time the radiant rose the meteor traffic was pathetic. The cloudcam recorded just a couple of very minor streaks over several hours.
I was up at 2 AM last night (2016-08-12-02-00 EDT) in upstate NY. It was dark and clear, the moon was down. The Milky Way was clearly visible. We saw meteors every 20 seconds or so. Some were truly impressive.
This was a superior shower, one of the best I have seen. I watched from the outskirts of Wrightwood, CA; elevation 1800 m just 20 km north of the Los Angeles basin but with an SQM 19.05 sky, a measure of sky darkness. due to mountain shielding of the light dome (the Milky Way is visible). This published list of darkness comparisons: rates this as "Typical for a suburb with widely spaced single-family homes.".
Starting at 12:40 a.m. (when I went out and started viewing) I saw 5 spectacular Earth-grazing fireballs leaving persistent glowing trails, with apparent colors of white, reddish, and greenish. In two hours of total viewing time, ending at 3:30 a.m. (I did some driving around testing different viewing sites), I saw 91 meteors, with the peak right at the end when the radiant in Perseus was high overhead, and it had hit about 80 meteors and hour in a 15 minute period.
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