The Perseids

glynndah

good little witch.
Joined
Jun 25, 2005
Posts
26,903
Cut and Pasted from the StarDate Online website:


The next meteor shower is the Perseids on August 12. This year there’s no moonlight to interfere. The best time to watch is from 11 p.m. August 12 until dawn the next morning. The best direction to watch is wherever your sky is darkest. If you have a dark sky, you may see a meteor once a minute on average. The shower is also active for several days before and after its peak.

What are meteor showers?


An increase in the number of meteors at a particular time of year is called a meteor shower.

Comets shed the debris that becomes most meteor showers. As comets orbit the Sun, they shed an icy, dusty debris stream along the comet's orbit. If Earth travels through this stream, we will see a meteor shower. Depending on where Earth and the stream meet, meteors appear to fall from a particular place in the sky, maybe within the neighborhood of a constellation.

Meteor showers are named by the constellation from which meteors appear to fall, a spot in the sky astronomers call the radiant. For instance, the radiant for the Leonid meteor shower is located in the constellation Leo. The Perseid meteor shower is so named because meteors appear to fall from a point in the constellation Perseus.

What are shooting stars?

"Shooting stars" and "falling stars" are both names that people have used for many hundreds of years to describe meteors -- intense streaks of light across the night sky caused by small bits of interplanetary rock and debris called meteoroids crashing and burning high in Earth's upper atmosphere. Traveling at thousands of miles an hour, meteoroids quickly ignite in searing friction of the atmosphere, 30 to 80 miles above the ground. Almost all are destroyed in this process; the rare few that survive and hit the ground are known as meteorites.

When a meteor appears, it seems to "shoot" quickly across the sky, and its small size and intense brightness might make you think it is a star. If you're lucky enough to spot a meteorite (a meteor that makes it all the way to the ground), and see where it hits, it's easy to think you just saw a star "fall."

How can I best view a meteor shower?


If you live near a brightly lit city, drive away from the glow of city lights and toward the constellation from which the meteors will appear to radiate.

For example, drive north to view the Leonids. Driving south may lead you to darker skies, but the glow will dominate the northern horizon, where Leo rises. Perseid meteors will appear to "rain" into the atmosphere from the constellation Perseus, which rises in the northeast around 11 p.m. in mid-August.

After you've escaped the city glow, find a dark, secluded spot where oncoming car headlights will not periodically ruin your sensitive night vision. Look for state or city parks or other safe, dark sites.

Once you have settled at your observing spot, lay back or position yourself so the horizon appears at the edge of your peripheral vision, with the stars and sky filling your field of view. Meteors will instantly grab your attention as they streak by.

How do I know the sky is dark enough to see meteors?


If you can see each star of the Little Dipper, your eyes have "dark adapted," and your chosen site is probably dark enough. Under these conditions, you will see plenty of meteors.

What should I pack for meteor watching?


Treat meteor watching like you would the 4th of July fireworks. Pack comfortable chairs, bug spray, food and drinks, blankets, plus a red-filtered flashlight for reading maps and charts without ruining your night vision. Binoculars are not necessary. Your eyes will do just fine.
 
!

Been waiting for this night...wait for it every year...usually a disappointment, but I always have optimism...hope you see some!

Ami
 
There was an especially good shower one year when my husband and I were both in grad school.

We stayed up half the night, laying back against the windshield of my big old car, drinking and laughing and trying to catch as many fiery streaks on video as we could.

He has used much of that footage, too (after editing out the audio - ahem) in power point demonstrations for his science classes.
 
You think I can get the powers to be to schedule them on a Saturday night/Sunday morning each year?

Every year I keep hoping I'd be able to stay up to watch. I think the last time I was able to was 6 years ago. Oh well, maybe next year.
 
I was out at 11 last night for about 30 minutes. I got a bug bite and a stiff neck. I went out again after two. Armed with a pillow and a blanket, but not bug spray - one in 30 minutes seemed like pretty good odds - I tried it again. One small one, very short lasting, more towards the northern edge of the northeastern sky, and then a more spectacular one, almost directly overhead. After 20 more minutes with no sightings and the sneaking suspicion that I had fallen asleep for part of that time, I gave up for the night.

I'll go out late tonight and try again.
 
We went out about 11 on Saturday night and saw half a dozen over about 45 minutes, then the dew came down and we started to freeze, so we gave up.
 
Awesome display :cool:

Caught it on the beach. At one point it was almost like fireworks night :cathappy:

I wanna go back in time to last night!
 
Back
Top