Summer meteor showers

Is there anything more peaceful than lying on your back on a warm summer night, gazing up at the stars, and seeing a meteor fly past you?

You can see this phenomenon for yourself this summer during the Perseid Meteor Shower on the nights of August 12-13.

The Perseid Meteor Shower is one of the most popular because it occurs during the warm month of August, when people are spending more time outdoors enjoying the weather.

It is also well known because it displays many meteors. On rare occasions, a viewer in dark skies (such as within our provincial parks) can see as many as 120 or more meteors per hour – that’s two per minute!

Most observers will typically see about 60 meteors an hour in non-moonlit skies. Unfortunately, this year the waning gibbous moon will light up the skies just as the meteor shower gets going.

What is a meteor?

Night sky

Meteors are small bits of dust grains that are, on average, no bigger than the size of your thumbnail. They are actually the remnants of comets.

As these “dirty snowballs” orbit the sun, they melt away much of their surface meteor, leaving the dust grains behind.

The nucleus of the comet may be small, but the trail of material (tail) that stretches behind it can last for tens or even hundreds of millions of kilometres.

Once the comet passes the sun, the debris still may orbit for quite some time. If the Earth passes through this material, the bits of dust burn up in our atmosphere causing heat which, in turn, causes the molecules of gas nearby to glow.

Black and white shot of a meteor in the sky

Amazingly, astronomers believe that as much as a hundred million tons of meteorite material might fall to the Earth each year.

Most of this is small dust that probably gets caught in our eaves, and we never even know about it!

Where do meteors come from?

Meteor showers are named after the constellation from which they appear to originate. Of course, there is no connection between the constellation and the meteor shower, however an optical illusion provides us with that perspective.

If one were to drive a car at night into a swarm of mosquitoes, the light of the headlights reflected from the mosquitoes would appear to be coming from a point straight ahead.

Diagram of the meteor

In truth, the mosquitoes are all over the place. However because of the car’s speed and direction of travel, it appears that the mosquitoes originated from a single point (the radiant).

For a meteor shower, the motion of the Earth is similar to the car and the meteoroidal material is similar to the mosquitoes.

The Perseid shower is so named because the streaks of light seem to trace backwards to a point between Perseus and Cassiopeia.

Meteor-watching tips

Here are some tips for how to get the most out of your meteor shower experience.

  • Bring a blanket or something to sit on and an extra layer of clothing for cooler evening temperatures
  • The best time to watch for meteors is when the sky is darkest. Moon phases make a difference (the less moon, the better)
  • Shooting stars (meteors) are pretty easy to spot if the skies are clear and you have sharp pair of eyes
  • Be patient. Meteors tend to come in waves with quiet times in-between

 

Want to learn more about what’s happening in the night sky this month? Check out the August edition of Eyes on the Skies


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