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Perseid meteor shower set to put on a great show

You can expect to see up to 80 “shooting stars” per hour when 2012’s best shower peaks Saturday night, August 11/12.
By Richard Talcott Published: August 3, 2012
Perseid-meteor-shower
The Perseid meteor shower peaks the night of August 11/12, when viewers with clear skies can expect to see up to 80 meteors per hour. Astronomy: Roen Kelly
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Enjoying a meteor shower requires only comfort and patience. Senior Editor Michael E. Bakich gives tips on spending a night under "shooting stars" in this video. Click on the image to go to the video.
If you ask most skygazers to name their favorite meteor shower, the odds are good that “Perseid” will be the first word out of their mouths. This annual shower seemingly has it all: It offers a consistently high rate of meteors year after year; it produces a higher percentage of bright ones than most other showers; it occurs in August when many people take summer vacation; and it happens at a time when nice weather and reasonable nighttime temperatures are common north of the equator. No other major shower can boast all four of these attributes.

And this year’s Perseid meteor shower promises two other significant advantages. First, it occurs when the Moon is at a waning crescent phase, which means bright moonlight won’t diminish the number of visible meteors. And second, the shower peaks on a Saturday night, August 11/12, so most people can afford to sleep in or at least relax the following day.

Senior Editor Michael Bakich of Astronomy magazine loves watching meteor showers, particularly spectacular ones like the Perseids. “It has to be one of the easiest, most relaxing forms of entertainment available to backyard skygazers,” he says. “There’s no need for a telescope because optical aid narrows your field of view, and you want to take in as much sky as possible. And best of all, you can observe the spectacle while lying down. Who could ask for more?”

The Perseids begin as tiny specks of dust that hit Earth’s atmosphere at 37 miles per second (59 km/s), vaporizing from friction with the air and leaving behind the streaks of light we call meteors. The meteors appear to radiate from a spot on the border between the constellations Cassiopeia and Perseus (the latter gives its name to the shower). This so-called radiant lies about one-third of the way from the northeastern horizon to the zenith (the overhead point) around midnight local daylight time and climbs higher as dawn approaches.

The crescent Moon, which rises shortly after 1 a.m., won’t have much impact because the shower consistently produces lots of bright meteors. Observers under clear dark skies likely will see 60 to 80 meteors per hour — an average of at least one per minute — in the hour or two before twilight starts to break shortly after 4 a.m. local daylight time. By then, the brilliant planets Venus and Jupiter will add to one of the finest predawn shows of 2012.

Fast facts:
  • The dust particles that create Perseid meteors were born in the comet known as 109P/Swift-Tuttle. This object orbits the Sun once every 130 years; it last returned to the inner solar system in 1992.
  • Although 37 miles per second (59 km/s) may seem fast, Perseid meteors are not the quickest among annual showers. The Leonids of November top the charts, hitting our atmosphere at 44 miles per second (71 km/s).
  • Although most shower meteors meet their demise high in Earth’s atmosphere, at altitudes between 50 and 70 miles (85 and 115 kilometers), a few bigger particles survive to within 12 miles (20km) of the surface. These typically produce “fireballs” that glow as bright as or brighter than Venus.

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KURT JOHNSON from MINNESOTA said:
Was in the Boundary Waters, on Lake 4, August 13, and Lake Insula on August 14. Had 4 boys (high schol senior, college junior) on the trip that had looked at the sky, but never "seen" the sky. Needless to say, the Perseid's gave them a great show. They've been converted now. Gave them a tour of the summer sky - summer triangle, Lyra, Aquila, Cygnus, the Dippers, Cassiopeia, Andromeda, Draco, Sagittarius, Hercules, Delphinus, etc.
MARK STUBERG from CALIFORNIA said:
Hello,It is the evening of August 11,however it is not the Perseids
shower of which I inquire.
Last month,during the waning moon,I noticed a peculiar thing.I can best describe it as a "shadow" blocking out the lower point of the lunar crescent. I observed it then three nights in a row, before the fog interfered.This months waning moon is showing the same missing point-the lower one-as did July's.I have tried to figure this thing out with no success.Could anyone shed some light on this "shadowed" subject? Thanks very much, MOS









JAIME DIAZ from MEXICO said:
Thanks, I will try to see them. Though I saw one meteoro today 4;3a am watching Moon, Jupiter and Venus.
5 stars
RONALD BERT from VIRGINIA said:
Thanks for the reminder. It's on the calendar...
HEIDI NETHERTON from LOUISIANA said:
I want to see the meteor showers which I have never seen. Do I have to wake up at 4:00 a.m or will the showers begin earlier? What time will they start? I live in Louisiana. Do I just look up at the sky?
5 stars
JAMES C MCDONOUGH from PENNSYLVANIA said:
You gotta love these events. Lets hope for clear skies.
BONNIE KIRCHNER from MINNESOTA said:
If no clouds, I will be watching the Perseids Meteor Shower over Northeastern MN, Bear Island Lake!
MR KEVIN CRAIG from WISCONSIN said:
I am really looking forward to the shower. I hope everyone has clear skies and a bottle of Irish whiskey.
SAM NAUMAN from TEXAS said:
Well, I am going to have a sky gazing party and watch the Perseids as well as all the other heavenly bodies that I have been missing because of weather or the moon.
4 stars
LEWIS HOUCK from NORWAY said:
The main problem for us in the far northern latitudes this time of year (my "OP" is close to 60 degrees N) is not so much the phase of the Moon, or even what the weather is doing, but the lack of a good dark sky, even between midnight and 2 am. The Perseids are just a little too "summerishly" timed for any high-count observations here. But I plan to be up all night anyway, hoping to catch the brightest ones at least... And then there is always the hope that my patience might night really pay off and I could witness one of those terrific grand-slam fireballs crashing through the heavens.
Lewis Houck, Risor, Norway
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