If you want to get your meteor on, this week is the perfect time as our planet passes through the remnants of a comet, creating the annual fireworks display in the night sky
Just the facts
“Perseids have always been known for putting on a good show,” said Parshati Patel, a Western University astrophysicist and space educator with the school’s Institute for Earth and Space Exploration. The phenomenon’s name comes from the Perseus constellation, from which it appears to materialize in the night sky. In reality, the Earth is passing through the cluster of debris left behind by the comet Swift-Tuttle, as it does every year at this time.
How to get a good look
First, Patel says, get out of town and away from urban light pollution. Take about 30 to 40 minutes to let your eyes adjust to the night sky — don’t even look at your phone, Patel advises. “Face the Big Dipper and look toward the east,” she said. “You don’t need to know the exact location,” but it helps if you look closer to the horizon. Perseids is known for having a high number of strikes against the atmosphere per hour.
Lights in the sky
Some of the fragments that make up the shower can be as small as a grain of sand, however they make for a spectacular light show as they burn up close to Earth. “Basically they’re bumping off the atmosphere,” Patel explained. This gives the appearance of what is commonly called a shooting star. “These are just tiny, tiny objects,” she added. “Those would actually burn up in the atmosphere because of the friction.” Bigger pieces of the debris sometimes look like green fireballs from the ground.
Definitions galore
It may seem academic to the average person, but there are differences between asteroids (big, rocky objects found between Mars and Jupiter), meteoroids (tiny objects floating around the solar system closer to the Earth), meteors (the burning streaks of light you see in the sky) and meteorites (what’s left on the ground after a meteor hits). “I own a meteorite,” Patel says proudly, and Western University has its own collection of objects that came from outer space.
2020 is good for something
Why are stargazers excited right now? Patel says this summer has been a banner one for people who like to look to the stars. “We pass through it every August,” Patel said of the Perseid meteor shower, which is at peak viewing now. In July, people got a glimpse of the newly discovered Neowise comet (Patel got pics of it), named after the orbiting telescope that detected it. And later this summer will be a good time to view the Milky Way galaxy from Earth, Patel says
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