Look to the skies! (Perseids and planet alignment)

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Wasabi Poptart

Go outside tonight or early tomorrow morning and behold the wonders of nature!

The annual Perseid meteor shower is already putting on an excellent show, and the celestial fireworks have yet to peak. The main event is tonight. Meanwhile, a delightfully tight configuration of planets graces the evening sky.

Rarely has there been a better time to go out, look up and enjoy easy-to-watch cosmic spectacles.

Across the Northern Hemisphere, the best time to watch the Perseid meteor shower will be tonight through the pre-dawn hours local time Friday, regardless of where you live. Weather permitting, patient skywatchers could see a shooting star every minute or so.

The Perseids are always reliable and sometimes rather spectacular. Only bad weather or bright moonlight can put a damper on the event, and this year the moon — a thin crescent that will set right after the sun — is not a factor.

Astronomers are expecting the best, and skywatchers around the globe are seeing encouraging, sometimes explosive signs. Several of the Perseids' characteristic fireballs and exploding meteors, called bolides, have been spotted.

"On Saturday night, one bolide lit up the field," said Steve Lieber of the Astronomical Society of Long Island. "Looked like a flash going off. Saw the vapor trail for 15 to 20 seconds after that."

Vapor trails are striking and sometimes colorful streams, looking like smoke, that can linger after particularly bright meteors. Most last just a few seconds.

"What has struck me so far about this year are not so much the overall number of meteors people have seen, but the number of reported fireball meteors," said SPACE.com's skywatching columnist, Joe Rao. "It seems there have been more such sightings than usual this year. Hopefully that will keep up right on through the maximum of the shower."

Meanwhile, Venus, Mars and Saturn are clustered in the evening sky and will be joined tonight and Friday by the graceful crescent moon. Anyone with clear skies can easily spot the foursome looming above the western horizon as soon as darkness falls. It's a great opportunity, using SPACE.com's planet alignment map, to find and identify planets you otherwise might mistake for stars.

But wait, there's more. In the predawn all week, Jupiter is a brilliant jewel high in the southern sky and impossible to miss — nothing nearby is even close to being as bright.

How the meteor shower works

The Perseids are bits of debris from Comet Swift-Tuttle, which has laid down several streams of debris, each in a slightly different location, over the centuries as it orbits the sun.

Every August, Earth passes through these debris streams, which spread out over time. Most meteors are the size of sand grains, with a few as large as a pea. They vaporize as they enter Earth's atmosphere, creating brilliant streaks across the sky.

Earth began entering the Perseid stream in late July. Over the past several nights, increasing numbers of shooting stars, including some dazzling fireballs, have been reported. Rates of around 20 per hour (3 per minute) were already being noted early Tuesday, according to the International Meteor Organization. That bodes well for a spectacular show at the peak.

The Perseids appear to emanate from the constellation Perseus, which rises high in the sky around midnight and is nearly overhead by dawn. As with most meteor showers, the hours between midnight and daybreak are typically the best time to watch, because that's when the side of Earth you are on is rotating into the direction of Earth's travels through space, so meteors are being "scooped up" by the atmosphere at higher rates, much like a car's windshield ends the lives of more bugs than does the rear bumper.

Astronomers expect 80 meteors per hour and perhaps even more in short bursts of up to 15 minutes or so. Rates will be much lower for those in urban areas.
 
Yeah, once again here, the obscene hot weather has made way for showers and a storm to cover up any neat thing the skies bring us.

Is it +30 today or is it +5? WHO FUCKING KNOWS!

I love intemperate regions.
 
Yeah, Alberta's weather has been really goofy this summer... I can't believe how bloody humid it is in southern Alberta (normally a very arid place).

Hopefully I'll be able to see this tonight.
 
I will be out there tonight eyes toward the sky hoping to see something but knowing my luck I will be crushed by meteorite. [FONT=verdana,arial,helvetica,sans-serif][/FONT]
 
I went out last night and saw 5-6 good ones in 2 hours. We also had rain and clouds, but the night was not a total loss (a friend had great fun with my green laser pointer), but due to the intermittent rain, I wasn't adventurous enough to set up my camera and tripod (and I even went back to the states to buy a cable release that I didn't get to use). It looks like even more cloud cover and rain tonight, so I'm glad I went yesterday.
 
M

Matt²

Just saw a shooting star (1) while going out into the yard a while ago. Yay!
 
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