The cosmos’ annual gift to sky watchers, the Geminids Meteor shower, will peak on Dec. 13-14 this year.
During peak activity and perfect weather
conditions, which are rare, the Geminids produce approximately 100-150 meteors
per hour for viewing. However, this year a waning gibbous moon will make it
harder to view most of the shower, resulting in only 30-40 visible meteors per
hour at the peak in the Northern Hemisphere, depending on sky conditions. But
the Geminids are so bright that this should still be a good show.
Bill Cooke, lead of NASA’s Meteoroid Environments
Office at Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, suggests sitting
in the shade of a house or tree while also maintaining a view of the open sky
to alleviate moonlight interference.
The meteor shower is coined the Geminids because the
meteors appear to radiate from the constellation Gemini. According to Cooke,
meteors close to the radiant have very short trails and are easily missed, so
observers should avoid looking at that constellation. However, tracing a meteor
backwards to the constellation Gemini can determine if you caught a Geminid
(other weaker showers occur at the same time).
Gemini does not appear very high above the horizon in
the Southern Hemisphere, resulting in viewers only seeing approximately 25% of
the rates seen in the Northern Hemisphere, which is between 7-10 meteors per
hour. Sky watchers from the Southern Hemisphere are encouraged to find areas
with minimal light pollution and look to the northern sky to improve their
viewing opportunities.
The Geminids start around 9 or 10 p.m.
CST on Dec. 13, making it a great viewing opportunity for any viewers who
cannot be awake during later hours of the night. The shower will peak at 6 a.m.
CST on Dec. 14, but the best rates will be seen earlier around 2 a.m. local
time. You can still view Geminids just before or after this date, but the last
opportunity is on Dec. 17 – when a dedicated observer could possibly spot one
or two on that night.
For prime viewing, find an area away from city and
streetlights, bundle up for winter weather conditions, bring a blanket or
sleeping bag for extra comfort, lie flat on your back with your feet facing
south, and look up. Practice patience because it will take approximately 30
minutes for your eyes to fully adjust and see the meteors. Refrain from looking
at your cell phone or other bright objects to keep your eyes adjusted.
The show will last for most of the night, so you have
multiple opportunities to spot the brilliant streaks of light across our sky.
So where
does this magnificent shower come from? Meteors
are fragments and particles that burn up as they enter Earth’s atmosphere at
high speed, and they usually originate from comets.
The Geminid shower originates from the debris of 3200 Phaethon an
asteroid first discovered on Oct. 11, 1983, using the Infrared Astronomical
Satellite. Phaethon orbits the Sun every 1.4 years, and every year Earth passes
through its trail of debris, resulting in the Geminids Shower.
Phaethon is the first asteroid to be associated with a
meteor shower, but astronomers debate its exact classification and origins.
Phaethon lacks an icy shell (the staple characteristic of a comet), but some
consider it a “dead comet” – suggesting it once had an icy shell that melted
away. Other astronomers call it a “rock comet” because Phaethon passes very
close to the Sun during its orbit, which theoretically results in heating and
cracking that creates debris and dust. The bottom line is Phaethon’s exact
origins are still a mystery, but we do know it’s the Geminids parent body.
Geminids travel 78,000 miles per hour, over 40 times
faster than a speeding bullet, but it is highly unlikely that meteors will
reach the ground – most Geminids burn up at altitudes between 45 to 55 miles.
In addition to sky watching opportunities, meteor videos recorded by the NASA All Sky Fireball Network are available each morning to identify Geminids in these videos – just look for events labeled “GEM.”
And, if you want to know what else is in the sky for December, check out the video below from Jet Propulsion Laboratory’s monthly “What’s Up” video series:
Happy stargazing! by Lane Figueroa
Source: The 2022 Geminids Meteor Shower Is Approaching – Watch the Skies (nasa.gov)
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