Sunday Night!

General discussion area.

Moderator: Officers

Post Reply
User avatar
Zahasha
Guild Leader
Posts: 2261
Joined: Fri Jan 04, 2002 1:00 am
Location: Within a forested valley hidden deep in the foothills of the Siskiyou Mountains
Contact:

Sunday Night!

Post by Zahasha » Sat Aug 11, 2007 10:06 pm

This Sunday Night will be the BEST Meteor Display ....
copy /pasted from
http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2007 ... rseids.htm



NASA - National Aeronautics and Space Administration Science@NASA Web Site

Follow this link to skip to the main content
+ NASA Home
+ Search NASA Web
+ Pagina en Español
+ Contact NASA


Search Site via Google

Go
HOME SATELLITE TRACKING ABOUT MAILING LISTS STORY ARCHIVES OTHER LANGUAGES



FEATURE

Great Perseids
07.11.2007

+ Play Audio | + Download Audio | + Email to a friend | + Join mailing list

July 11, 2007: Got a calendar? Circle this date: Sunday, August 12th. Next to the circle write "all night" and "Meteors!" Attach the above to your refrigerator in plain view so you won't miss the 2007 Perseid meteor shower.

"It's going to be a great show," says Bill Cooke of NASA's Meteoroid Environment Office at the Marshall Space Flight Center. "The Moon is new on August 12th--which means no moonlight, dark skies and plenty of meteors." How many? Cooke estimates one or two Perseids per minute at the shower's peak.

see caption

Above: A Perseid fireball photographed August 12, 2006, by Pierre Martin of Arnprior, Ontario, Canada. [Larger image]

The source of the shower is Comet Swift-Tuttle. Although the comet is nowhere near Earth, the comet's tail does intersect Earth's orbit. We glide through it every year in August. Tiny bits of comet dust hit Earth's atmosphere traveling 132,000 mph. At that speed, even a smidgen of dust makes a vivid streak of light--a meteor--when it disintegrates. Because Swift-Tuttle's meteors fly out of the constellation Perseus, they are called "Perseids."

Note: In the narrative that follows, all times are local. For instance, 9:00 pm means 9:00 pm in your time zone, where you live.


Sign up for EXPRESS SCIENCE NEWS delivery
The show begins between 9:00 and 10:00 pm on Sunday, August 12th, when Perseus rises in the northeast. This is the time to look for Perseid Earthgrazers--meteors that approach from the horizon and skim the atmosphere overhead like a stone skipping the surface of a pond.

"Earthgrazers are long, slow and colorful; they are among the most beautiful of meteors," says Cooke. He cautions that an hour of watching may net only a few of these--"at most"--but seeing even one makes the long night worthwhile.

As the night unfolds, Perseus climbs higher and the meteor rate will increase many-fold. "By 2 am on Monday morning, August 13th, dozens of Perseids may be flitting across the sky every hour." The crescendo comes before dawn when rates could exceed a meteor a minute.

For maximum effect, Cooke advises, "get away from city lights." The brightest Perseids can be seen from cities, he allows, but the greater flurry of faint, delicate meteors is visible only from the countryside. Scouts, this is a good time to go camping.

see caption

Above: The eastern sky, viewed during the hours before sunrise on Monday, Aug. 13, 2007.

And there's a bonus: Mars. In the constellation Taurus, just below Perseus, Mars shines like a bright red star. Many of the Perseids you see on August 12th and 13th will flit right past it. Instead of following the meteor, you may find you have a hard time taking your eyes off Mars. There's something bewitching about it, maybe the red color or perhaps the fact that it doesn't twinkle like a true star. You stare at Mars and it stares right back.

Earth and Mars are converging for a close encounter in December 2007. NASA is taking advantage by launching a new mission to Mars--the Phoenix Lander. Phoenix will touch down on an arctic plain where it can dig into the ground and investigate layers of soil and ice, searching for, among other things, a habitable zone for primitive microbes. The launch window opens on August 3rd, so by the time the Perseids arrive Phoenix may be hurtling toward the Red Planet. Landing: late Spring 2008.

It's something to think about at four in the morning, with Mars rising in the east, meteors flitting across the sky, and a summer breeze rustling the legs of your pajamas.

Maybe you should go circle your calendar again.

SEND THIS STORY TO A FRIEND

Author: Dr. Tony Phillips | Production Editor: Dr. Tony Phillips | Credit: Science@NASA
Web Links

NASA's future: The Vision for Space Exploration



USAGov
+ Freedom of Information Act
+ Budgets, Strategic Plans and Accountability Reports
+ The President’s Management Agenda
+ Privacy Policy and Important Notices
+ Inspector General Hotline
+ Equal Employment Opportunity Data Posted Pursuant to the No Fear Act
+ Information-Dissemination Priorities and Inventories
+ USA.gov - Your First Click to the US Government
+ ExpectMore - A Program Which Determines Whether Government Programs Are Effective

NASA
Curator: Bryan Walls
NASA Official: John M. Horack
Last Updated: June 9, 2005
+ Contact NASA
Image

"It is good to have an end to journey towards:
but it is the journey that matters in the end." ~Ursula K Le Guin
Post Reply