Astronomers are excited about the possibility of a new meteor shower May 30-31. And that excitement has sparked a lot of information about the tau Herculids. Some has been accurate, and some has not.
We get excited about meteor showers, too! But
sometimes events like this don’t live up to expectations – it happened with the 2019 Alpha Monocerotid shower, for example. And some astronomers predict a dazzling display of tau
Herculids could be “hit or miss.”
This
infrared image from NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope shows the broken Comet
73P/Schwassman-Wachmann 3 skimming along a trail of debris left during its
multiple trips around the sun. The flame-like objects are the comet’s fragments
and their tails, while the dusty comet trail is the line bridging the
fragments. (Credit: NASA)
So, we’re encouraging eager skywatchers
to channel their inner scientists, and look beyond the headlines. Here are the facts:
- On the night of May 30 into the
early morning of May 31, Earth will pass through the debris trails of a
broken comet called 73P/Schwassmann-Wachmann, or SW3.
- The comet, which broke into
large fragments back in 1995, won’t reach this point in its orbit until
August.
- If the fragments from were
ejected with speeds greater than twice the normal speeds—fast enough to
reach Earth—we might get a meteor shower.
- Spitzer observations published
in 2009 indicate that at least some fragments are moving fast enough. This is one reason why astronomers are
excited.
- If a meteor shower does occur,
the tau Herculids move slowly by meteor standards – they will be faint.
Observers in North America under clear,
dark skies have the best chance of seeing a tau Herculid shower. The peak time
to watch is around 1am on the East Coast or 10pm on the West Coast.
We can’t be certain what we’ll see. We can only hope it’s spectacular.
Source: New
meteor shower? How many meteors will I see, really? – Watch the Skies
(nasa.gov)
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