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Perseid Treat: Earthgrazing Meteors and When to Spot Them


posted: 09:03 am ET
10 August 2001

Untitled Document

 

The Perseid meteor shower is known for producing a handful of colorful shooting stars that skim the horizon.

THE RADIANT

Click to see how the Perseid radiant starts low on the horizon and rises during the night.

Image created with Starry Night software.

These "Earthgrazer," as they are known, occur when the meteor shower's radiant, the point from which meteors appear to emanate, is low on the horizon.

The best time to look for these Earthgrazers is between 9 p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 11th, and midnight local time. No matter where you live, so long as it is in the Northern Hemisphere, just watch the northeastern horizon during this time.

While Saturday night is likely to be the best opportunity, several night surrounding the Perseid peak (early on Aug. 12) might produce Earthgrazers.

Below is a more complete description of the phenomenon from Tony Phillips, who writes for science.nasa.gov.


COMPLETE VIEWER'S GUIDE
When, where and how to watch the Perseid meteor shower
WILL THERE BE AN OUTBURST?

Each night through Monday, Aug. 13 should provide good viewing, but astronomers can't say for sure if there might be a surprise outburst. Full Story

SEE ANYTHING?
If you see the Perseids or have viewing tips or questions:
Uplink Your Views

Horse Flies
and Meteors

By Tony Phillips

Splat! There goes another bug on the windshield.

Anyone who's ever driven down a country lane has seen it happen. A fast moving car, a cloud of multiplying insects, and a big disgusting mess!

The next time that happens to you, instead of feeling grossed out, try thinking of the experience as an astronomy lesson. Your car is Earth. The bugs are tiny flakes of comet dust. The carnage on your windshield -- it's a meteor shower!

Kids, especially young boys, will love the analogy -- and indeed it's a good one.

Earth, like a speeding car, races around the Sun sweeping up everything in its path. As far as we know there are no insects in space, but there are plenty of small asteroids and bits of comet dust. They hit Earth's atmosphere -- splat! -- and disintegrate as fiery streaks of light called meteors.

This weekend our planet will plow through a dense swarm of dust shed by periodic comet Swift-Tuttle. Hitting our atmosphere at about 59 km/s (132,000 mph), the disintegrating specks will unleash a beautiful meteor shower called the Perseids, which peaks on Aug. 12th.

Coincidentally, many of those dust specks will be about the size of tiny insects -- perhaps as small as a flea or a mite. Meteoroids, which is what scientists call the dust grains before they burn up in our atmosphere, make vivid streaks across the sky not because they're big, but because they are fast-moving. In this respect cosmic meteoroids differ from Earthling bugs. Bugs move slowly with respect to cars, but meteoroids travel through space about as fast as Earth does. (Our planet circles the Sun traveling 30 km/s or 67,000 mph.)

Nevertheless, like slower-moving bugs, meteoroids accumulate mostly on the front windshield. You won't find meteoroids on the front windshield of your car, of course. Instead, they streak across the front windshield of our planet.

COMING IN NOVEMBER

The Leonid Meteor Shower 2001
Astronomers predict a meteor storm!

That's right -- Earth has a windshield. It's our atmosphere. The atmosphere protects us from the solar wind and assorted debris of space much as a car's windshield deflects the elements from its passengers.

The front windshield of our planet is the early morning sky. Earth circles the Sun dawn-side first, scooping up whatever lies on that side of the planet. Because Earth rotates once a day everyone gets a daily turn looking out the front windshield. It's overhead around 6 a.m. local time. Those dark hours just before sunrise are usually the best for meteor watching.

That's why most experts suggest looking for Perseids before dawn on Sunday, Aug. 12th. No matter where you live, the shower will climax when Earth's "front windshield" is overhead.

But Earth, like a car, has many windows -- the front isn't the only one. What about the others?

Rear windows tend to be dull. Not many bugs accumulate on the rear pane of a car and, likewise, not many meteoroids catch up to Earth from behind. The early evening sky (Earth's "rear window") is not a good place to look for shooting stars. The July 23, 2001, Pennsylvania fireball, which streaked over the US east coast around 6:00 p.m. local time, was an exception. It was a spectacular "rear window" meteor.

Side windows -- the ones to the left and right of passengers in cars -- can be more interesting. Zooming down a bug-infested country lane, side windows don't collect many insects. But the ones they do are worth examining. Bugs that strike side windows do so at a shallow angle, and they leave remarkable streaks -- long and colorful!

This weekend you can watch for the celestial rendition of such streaky bugs when Perseid meteoroids strike our planet's "side window." Between 9 p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 11th, and midnight on Sunday, Aug. 12th, the Perseid radiant (the point in the sky from which meteors will appear to stream) will lie low on the north-eastern horizon. Meteoroids emerging from the radiant during that time will skim the atmosphere horizontally -- much like a bug skimming the side window of an automobile. Meteor watchers call such shooting stars "Earthgrazers." They leave colorful, long-lasting trails.

"These meteors are extremely long," says Robert Lunsford, secretary general of the International Meteor Organization. "I have never been able to capture an Earthgrazer on film. Being shy, they tend to hug the horizon rather than shooting overhead where most cameras are aimed."

"There are exceptions," he added. "The most spectacular Earthgrazer I ever saw occurred shortly after 11 p.m. on November 16, 1996. I was facing east, watching for Leonid meteors, when this orange streak crawled over the hill low in the east. It climbed high [and traversed the southern sky]. The event lasted at least 5 seconds -- an eternity for a meteor watcher. Its peak brightness was similar to Jupiter. The entire track was a vivid orange and the head of the meteor had a diffuse halo."

COMPLETE VIEWER'S GUIDE
When, where and how to watch the Perseid meteor shower
WILL THERE BE AN OUTBURST?

Each night through Monday, Aug. 13 should provide good viewing, but astronomers can't say for sure if there might be a surprise outburst. Full Story

SEE ANYTHING?
If you see the Perseids or have viewing tips or questions:
Uplink Your Views

"Earthgrazers are rarely numerous," cautions Bill Cooke, a member of the Space Environments team at the Marshall Space Flight Center. "But even if you only see a few, you're likely to remember them."

Spotting Perseid Earthgrazers is a good thing to try this Saturday after 9 p.m., Cooke added. The Perseid shower, per se, won't climax until Sunday morning before dawn -- but by then a bright quarter Moon will lie high in the sky casting a strong glare across Earth's "front windshield." Saturday-night Earthgrazers, spotted before moonrise, could prove to be the best part of the 2001 Perseid shower.

Perseid Earthgrazers -- long and colorful, shy, truly remarkable. And they won't leave a gooey residue! Catch some if you can.

 

 

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