View Full Version : Geminid Meteor Shower


MumIsAlwaysRight
12-13-2007, 11:33 PM
My kids are outside on the trampoline as we speak watching the show. The later it gets, the better show you will see.

What could be the best meteor display of the year will reach its peak on the night of Dec.13-14.


Here is what astronomers David Levy and Stephen Edberg have written of the annual Geminid Meteor Shower: "If you have not seen a mighty Geminid fireball arcing gracefully across an expanse of sky, then you have not seen a meteor."


The Geminids get their name from the constellation of Gemini, the Twins, because the meteors appear to emanate from a spot in the sky near the bright star Castor in Gemini.


Also in Gemini this month is the planet Mars, nearing a close approach to the Earth later this month, and shining brilliantly with yellow-orange hue. To be sure, Mars is certain to attract the attention of prospective Geminid watchers this upcoming week.


Reliable shower


The Geminid Meteors are usually the most satisfying of all the annual showers, even surpassing the famous Perseids of August.


Studies of past find the "Gems" have a reputation for being rich both in slow, bright, graceful meteors and fireballs as well as faint meteors, with relatively fewer objects of medium brightness.


They are of medium speed, encountering Earth at 22 miles per second (35 kps). They are bright and white, but unlike the Perseids, they leave few visible trails or streaks. They are four times denser than most other meteors, and have been observed to form jagged or divided paths.


Geminids also stand apart from the other meteor showers in that they seem to have been spawned not by a comet, but by 3200 Phaethon, an Earth-crossing asteroid. Then again, the Geminids may be comet debris after all, for some astronomers consider Phaethon to really be the dead nucleus of a burned-out comet that somehow got trapped into an unusually tight orbit. Interestingly, on December 10, Phaethon will be passing about 11 million miles (18 million kilometers) from Earth, its closest approach since its discovery in 1983.


The prospects for this year


The Geminids perform excellently in any year, but British meteor astronomer, Alastair McBeath, has categorized 2007 as a "great year."


Last year's display was hindered somewhat by the moon, two days past last quarter phase. But this year, the moon will be at new phase on Dec. 9. On the peak night, the moon will be a fat crescent, in the south-southwest at dusk and setting soon after 8 p.m. That means that the sky will be dark and moonless for the balance of the night, making for perfect viewing conditions for the shower.


According to McBeath, the Geminids are predicted to reach peak activity on Dec. 14 at 16:45 GMT. That means those places from central Asia eastwards across the Pacific Ocean to Alaska are in the best position to catch the very crest of the shower, when the rates conceivably could exceed 120 per hour.


"But," he adds, "maximum rates persist at only marginally reduced levels for some 6 to 10 hours around the biggest ones, so other places (such as North America) should enjoy some fine Geminid activity as well.


Indeed, under normal conditions on the night of maximum activity, with ideal dark-sky conditions, at least 60 to 120 Geminid meteors can be expected to burst across the sky every hour on the average (Light pollution greatly cuts the numbers).


The Earth moves quickly through this meteor stream producing a somewhat broad, lopsided activity profile. Rates increase steadily for two or three days before maximum, reaching roughly above a quarter of its peak strength, then drop off more sharply afterward. Late Geminids, however, tend to be especially bright. Renegade forerunners and late stragglers might be seen for a week or more before and after maximum.


What to do


Generally speaking, depending on your location, Gemini begins to come up above the east-northeast horizon right around the time evening twilight is coming to an end. So you might catch sight of a few early Geminids as soon as the sky gets dark.

There is a fair chance of perhaps catching sight of some "Earth-grazing" meteors. Earth grazers are long, bright shooting stars that streak overhead from a point near to even just below the horizon. Such meteors are so distinctive because they follow long paths nearly parallel to our atmosphere.

The Geminids begin to appear noticeably more numerous in the hours after 10 p.m. local time, because the shower's radiant is already fairly high in the eastern sky by then. The best views, however, come around 2 a.m., when their radiant point will be passing very nearly overhead.

The higher a shower's radiant, the more meteors it produces all over the sky.

But keep this in mind: At this time of year, meteor watching can be a long, cold business. You wait and you wait for meteors to appear. When they don't appear right away, and if you're cold and uncomfortable, you're not going to be looking for meteors for very long! The late Henry Neely (1878-1963), who for many years served as a lecturer at New York's Hayden Planetarium, once had this to say about watching for the Geminids: "Take the advice of a man whose teeth have chattered on many a winter's night – wrap up much more warmly than you think is necessary!"

Hot cocoa or coffee can take the edge off the chill, as well as provide a slight stimulus. It's even better if you can observe with friends. That way, you can keep each other awake, as well as cover more sky. Give your eyes time to dark-adapt before starting.

Bundle up and good luck!

Tokrok
12-13-2007, 11:44 PM
Where I live it is tomorrow and I might go up to a small observatory (when I say small i mean small - really small) that is a walking distance from my house. They are having a visitors night to watch it.

PaperClip
12-13-2007, 11:51 PM
Umm...which direction exactly do you look? Lol. I feel like a person that doesn't know much for posting that :P.

gabyta
12-13-2007, 11:53 PM
it's almost 10 pm where I live.. in that case I should go out and watch the sky? :)

Umm...which direction exactly do you look? Lol. I feel like a person that doesn't know much for posting that :P.


Where to look
These medium-speed meteors appear to emanate from near the bright star Castor, in the constellation of Gemini the Twins — hence the name "Geminid."

The track of each one does not necessarily begin near Castor, nor even in the constellation Gemini, but it always turns out that the path of a Geminid extended backward passes through a tiny region of sky about 0.2 degree in diameter (an effect of perspective). In apparent size, that's less than half the width of the moon. As such, this is a rather sharply defined radiant as most meteor showers go, suggesting the stream is "young" — perhaps only several thousand years old.

Generally speaking, depending on your location, Castor begins to come up above the east-northeast horizon right around the time evening twilight is coming to an end.

As Gemini is beginning to climb the eastern sky just after darkness falls, there is a fair chance of seeing some "Earth-grazing" meteors. Earthgrazers are long, bright shooting stars that streak overhead from a point near to even just below the horizon. Such meteors are so distinctive because they follow long paths nearly parallel to our atmosphere.

By around 9 p.m., Gemini will have climbed more than one-third of the way up from the horizon. Meteor sightings should begin to increase noticeably thereafter. By around 2 a.m., Gemini will stand high overhead.


There's more here (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/16110109/)

MumIsAlwaysRight
12-13-2007, 11:57 PM
Umm...which direction exactly do you look? Lol. I feel like a person that doesn't know much for posting that :P.

Straight up :xtongue: Best thing to do is lay down and just focus on your immediate viewing area. My kids are in and out reporting everytime they see one. Don't forget to make a wish.

Insanity
12-14-2007, 12:01 AM
When do you think it will be good for viewing around.. VA-NC-SNC-FL. Around the east coast?

PaperClip
12-14-2007, 12:01 AM
Lol. I didn't know if it should be towards the north, or south or something like that. Also, the only constellations I've been successful, in my lifetime, of finding are the Big and Little Dippers.

I've got a camera ready to take out there later tonight. We've been talking about meteors, meteorites and meteoroids in Science, and for some reason my teacher hadn't mentioned to us this Shower.

MumIsAlwaysRight
12-14-2007, 12:28 AM
Im in NC myself and in the past 20 minutes, I have seen 4. Don't worry too much on a direction to look other than straight up. These meteors are so bright and generally have quite a tail to them, that if they appear to the left or right of where you are looking, they will catch your eye. Activity is supposed to pick up around 10pm and will go right through sunrise tomorrow.

gabyta
12-14-2007, 02:12 AM
there are clouds here!!! I can't see anything :(

Jacques
12-14-2007, 01:19 PM
My girlfriend and I went outside last night. She had never seen a meteor shower. In the half hour or so we sat out, we saw about 10 or 15, with a handful of really sizable ones. Pretty neat show!