Heads up stargazers! The Leonid meteor shower peaks tonight, bringing a flurry of shooting stars to the night sky as Earth passes through the trail of debris shed by comet 55P/Tempel-Tuttle.
The Leonid meteor shower is active from Nov. 3 to Dec 2 and peaks overnight on Nov. 16-17, when up to 10 meteors per hour may be visible radiating from a patch of sky in the constellation Leo, according to the American Meteor Society.
What time should I look for the Leonids?
The best time to look for Leonids is late at night on Nov. 16 through to the hours preceding dawn on Nov. 17, when the constellation Leo will be positioned high above the eastern horizon, with Jupiter shining brightly to its upper right. Look for a patch of sky roughly 40 degrees above the radiant in Leo, that’s roughly the width of four clenched fists held at arm’s length, where the meteor trails will be at their longest.
“On the morning of November 17th I would expect observers of the Leonid shower to see 5-10 meteors per hour,” Robert Lunsford of the American Meteor Society told Space.com in an email. “It falls off rapidly, [so] I would expect rates of only 5 [shooting stars] per hour on the following morning and another 50 percent drop off on each of the following mornings.”
Be sure to wear warm clothing to combat the cold and allow at least 30 minutes for your eyes to adjust fully to the dark, to give yourself the best chance of spotting fainter members of the annual shower. Try to use a red light if you need to look around, as this will help keep your night vision intact over a standard flashlight!
The Leonid meteor shower is known for producing spectacular meteor storms on occasion, when hundreds, or even thousands of meteors can be seen brightening the night sky each hour. Sadly, Earth isn’t due to pass through a particularly dense cloud of cometary debris from 55P/Tempel-Tuttle until the year 2099.
Credit: www.space.com











Photographer Finds Locations Of 1960s Postcards To See How They Look Today, And The Difference Is Unbelievable
Hij zet 3 IKEA kastjes tegen elkaar aan en maakt dit voor zijn vrouw…Wat een gaaf resultaat!!
Scientists Discover 512-Year-Old Shark, Which Would Be The Oldest Living Vertebrate On The Planet
Hus til salg er kun 22 kvadratmeter – men vent til du ser det indvendigt
Superknepet – så blir snuskiga ugnsformen som ny igen!
Meteorite That Recently Fell in Somalia Turns Out to Contain Two Minerals Never Before Seen on Earth
Nearly Frozen Waves Captured On Camera By Nantucket Photographer
It’s Official: Astronomers Have Discovered another Earth