This Thursday and Friday, there will be one of the best annual meteor showers you or your family can watch – the Perseids. And some experts are even predicting that there might be a meteor “outburst” this year – where the number of shooting stars increases beyond the usual rates.
This is a complicated year for watching the Perseid meteor shower, because the evening sky has a roughly half-lit-up moon in it, making it more difficult to catch the faint “shooting stars.” So if you can wait until the Moon sets (between midnight and 1 am), you should have better viewing in the pre-dawn darkness. That’s great advice for people on vacation or camping trips (and for insomniacs,) but probably not useful for those who have to get up for work! (If you are watching before midnight, one suggestion is to get into a moon shadow – a place where something blocks your view of the Moon and it’s easier to scan the sky.)
The best night is the evening of Thursday, Aug. 11 and morning of Friday, Aug. 12th, although there could be significantly more meteors in the sky on the night before and the night after too.Meteors or “shooting stars” (which have nothing to do with stars) are pieces of cosmic dust and dirt hitting the Earth’s atmosphere at high speed and making a flash of light. These flashes could happen anywhere in the sky, so it’s best to view the shower from a dark, wide-open place. See the list at the end for viewing suggestions.
The Perseid meteors are cosmic “garbage” left over from a regularly returning comet, called Swift-Tuttle (after the two astronomers who first discovered it). The comet itself returns to the inner solar system every 130 years or so; it was last here in 1992. During each pass, it leaves dirt and dust behind and it is this series of long dirt and dust streams that we encounter every August. Some scientists who study comets and meteors are predicting that we might briefly encounter an especially crowded part of the debris stream this time.
Each flash you see is a bit of material from the comet hitting the Earth’s atmosphere and getting heated up (and heating up the air around it) as it speeds through our thick atmosphere. Both the superheated dust and dirt and the heated air contribute to the visible light we observe. Since comets are left-overs from the early days of our solar system, you can tell yourself (or your kids) that each flash of light is the “last gasp” of a bit of cosmic material that formed some 5 billion years ago.
A few tips for best viewing:
ANDREW FRAKNOI’S EIGHT HINTS FOR “TAKING A METEOR SHOWER”
- Get away from city lights and find a location that’s relatively dark
- If it’s significantly foggy or cloudy, you’re out of luck
- Your location should allow you to see as much of the dome of the sky as possible
- Allow time for your eyes to get adapted to the dark (at least 10–15 minutes)
- Don’t use a telescope or binoculars – they restrict your view (which means you don’t have to be part of the 1% with fancy equipment to see the shower; this is a show for the 99%!)
- Dress warm – it can get cooler at night even in August (and don’t forget the insect repellent while you are outside)
- Be patient (it’s not fireworks): keep looking up & around & you’ll see flashes of light
- Take someone with you with whom you like to spend time in the dark!