.....The most reliable meteor shower of the year is the Perseid meteor shower, usually peaking on the night between August 11th and August 12th. In younger years, this was the one time during the year that I could get the whole family as interested in astronomy as I was, a situation that I found was pretty common. In recent years, I have often held public observing sessions, which have turned out really well, as there is no bottleneck at the telescopes; meteor observing is laying back, getting comfortable, and trying to keep as much of the sky as possible visible to see shooting stars. Easy to set up, and enjoyed by all.
.....I'm not doing that this year.
.....I'm not doing that this year.
.....Let me explain why. Every dark, moonless night not dominated by city lights, we can expect to see a few shooting stars per hour, flashing randomly across the sky. These typically come from one of three sources: Leftover bits of flotsam and jetsam that have been floating around the solar system for the last five and a half billion years (cool), little bits that have been boiled off of comets as they passed around the Sun (also cool), or nuts/bolts/heat shields/tool boxes that have come off of space craft and are crashing back down to Earth (less cool).
.....Each time a comet passes through the inner solar system, if it still has much of its original ice, that ice will boil off, taking some dust pebbles with it, and the ice will reflect sunlight, resulting in the bright coma and tail. What happens to this once the comet goes back to the outer reaches of the solar system? Nothing. That comet rubble stays in orbit, resulting in the comet's orbit eventually becoming a dusty tube of gunk around the Sun. If the Earth should pass through this gunk, then when the particles hit the Earth's atmosphere they will light up from the heat of friction generated from going from a temperature of less than three hundred degrees below zero (Fahrenheit) to thousands of degrees. Since all of these meteors are coming from the same general area in space, they will appear to come from the same general area of the sky, meaning that the meteors will all seem to radiate out from the same point. (Called, reasonably enough, the "radiant".)
.....Each August, the Earth passes through the remnant trail of the comet Swift-Tuttle, generating the Perseid meteor shower because the radiant of the meteors (the dotted circle in the image below) is in the constellation of Perseus. Meteor showers do not require a telescope or binoculars; just go outside and look (in this case to the northeast, especially after midnight).
.....A lot of this is part of the standard run up to a meteor shower. What makes this year different is that the meteor shower peaks only about a day before the full Moon. Looking at different sources, the number of meteors per hour for the Perseid Meteor shower is usually given as a number between 60 and 120. (Wow!) Now let's look at that as the sky gets brighter due to the Moon. Even if we take the most generous version, that considers that we can see all the way down to our eyes limit. With the bright Moon, we can't. With an interfering Moon, even if we could see down to fifth magnitude (as opposed to sixth magnitude, our limit), we would go from 120 down to about 46. The full Moon is much more limiting than this, however. Even if we assume a third magnitude limit, we're down to about seven. Per hour. With any bad or humid air, this could limit us to second magnitude (maybe three meteors an hour, if we're lucky), or first (maybe three meteors every four hours). This is enough of a enthusiasm-killer that it's better to look to next year, when the moon will be much less troublesome.
.....A lot of this is part of the standard run up to a meteor shower. What makes this year different is that the meteor shower peaks only about a day before the full Moon. Looking at different sources, the number of meteors per hour for the Perseid Meteor shower is usually given as a number between 60 and 120. (Wow!) Now let's look at that as the sky gets brighter due to the Moon. Even if we take the most generous version, that considers that we can see all the way down to our eyes limit. With the bright Moon, we can't. With an interfering Moon, even if we could see down to fifth magnitude (as opposed to sixth magnitude, our limit), we would go from 120 down to about 46. The full Moon is much more limiting than this, however. Even if we assume a third magnitude limit, we're down to about seven. Per hour. With any bad or humid air, this could limit us to second magnitude (maybe three meteors an hour, if we're lucky), or first (maybe three meteors every four hours). This is enough of a enthusiasm-killer that it's better to look to next year, when the moon will be much less troublesome.
.....Looking for Perseids can still be done in the nights leading up to Thursday night, but the Moon will drown out most of them. Here is a map of the northeastern part of the sky on Thursday at about midnight.
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