76°
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
7 Day Forecast
Follow our weather team on social media

How to watch the Perseid meteor shower this week

4 years 1 month 3 weeks ago Tuesday, August 11 2020 Aug 11, 2020 August 11, 2020 5:36 AM August 11, 2020 in News
Source: CNN

Many will be able to enjoy one of 2020's most anticipated meteor showers this week.

The Perseid meteor shower is expected to peak with the most number of meteors during the late evening hours of Tuesday, August 11 and early morning hours of Wednesday, August 12.

NASA scientists advised that although the shower can be seen any time after 9 p.m. in your area, the best time to spot a flurry of meteors will be during the darkest part of the night, in the early hours before dawn, between 2 a.m. and dawn.

The bright moon will rise around midnight, which changes the peak viewing window, according to NASA. But you can still expect to see a meteor streak across the sky about every two minutes.

Patience is key. It can take up to 45 minutes for your eyes to adjust to the dark for optimal viewing. The meteors can appear anywhere in the sky, but they look the brightest against the darkest sky, which is straight up.

Some meteors only have faint, quick streaks. Others are brighter and can appear to sail across our sky for several seconds, leaving a glowing smoke trail.

The best way to view the meteor shower is by sitting in a reclining lawn chair or lying on your back and looking up at the sky with a wide view. No special equipment is needed, but if you want the best view, it helps to be as far from artificial light as possible.

If you live in an urban area, you might want to take a drive to avoid city lights, which can make the meteor shower seem faint. Scientists from NASA also said that camping out in the country can triple the amount of visible meteors.

And don't forget to grab your camera before you head out. Meteor showers are a great opportunity for time-lapse videos and long-exposure photography, allowing your shots of the night sky to turn into van Gogh-like paintings of this starry spectacle.

Stargazers have been observing the Perseids for the past 2,000 years, according to NASA

These eye-catching meteors are linked to the Comet Swift-Tuttle, which orbits the sun once every 133 years. That means that every August, the Earth passes through the comet's debris field.

The ice and dust, accumulating over a thousand years, burn up in our atmosphere to create the meteor shower. The Perseids showcase more bright meteors than any other annual meteor shower.

The meteors can be traced to the Perseus constellation, from which they get their name, which will climb in the northeastern sky as the evening passes. From our perspective, the meteors all seem to come from a single point called the "radiant," but that's because they are moving parallel to each other.

When the radiant is highest in the sky, we'll see the most meteors. But Earthgrazer meteors, which skim Earth's atmosphere and showcase long, blazing tails, are visible earlier in the evening when the radiant is low above the horizon.

The meteors themselves are traveling at 132,000 miles per hour, which creates vivid streaks of light. These tiny stones can reach between 3,000 and 10,000 degrees Fahrenheit during this shower.

The meteor shower is also visible on August 10 and August 13 as well, according to the American Meteor Society.

More News

Desktop News

Click to open Continuous News in a sidebar that updates in real-time.
Radar
7 Days