[meteorite-list] The 2004 Perseid Meteor Shower

From: Ron Baalke <baalke_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Mon Jun 28 00:15:35 2004
Message-ID: <200406280407.VAA14188_at_zagami.jpl.nasa.gov>

http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2004/25jun_perseids2004.htm

The 2004 Perseid Meteor Shower
NASA Science News
June 25, 2004

Meteoroids in space since the Civil War will spice up
this summer's Perseid meteor shower.


The annual Perseid meteor shower is coming, and
forecasters say it could be unusually good.

The shower begins, gently, in mid-July when Earth enters the outskirts
of a cloud of debris from Comet Swift-Tuttle. Dust-sized meteoroids
hitting the atmosphere will streak across the night sky, at first only a
sprinkling, just a few each night, but the rate will build.

By August 12th when the shower peaks, sky watchers can expect to see
dozens, possibly even hundreds, of meteors per hour.

This is a good year for Perseids, for two reasons, explains Bill Cooke
of the NASA Marshall Space Flight Center. First, the Moon is new in
mid-August; moonlight won't spoil the show. Second, in addition to the
usual shower on August 12th, there might be an extra surge of meteors on
August 11th caused by a filament of dust newly drifting across Earth's
orbit.

The filament, like all the rest of the dust in the Perseid cloud, comes
from Comet Swift-Tuttle. The difference is, the filament is relatively
young. It boiled off the comet during the Civil War, in 1862. Other dust
in the cloud is older (perhaps thousands of years old), more dispersed,
and responsible for the month-long shower that peaks on August 12th. The
filament will eventually disperse, too, but for now it retains some of
its original ribbon-shape.

If predictions are correct, Earth will plow through the filament on
Wednesday, August 11th at 2100 UT (5 p.m. EDT). This will produce a
surge of mostly-faint meteors over Europe and Asia. Observers might see
"as many as 200 meteors per hour," says Cooke, who recommends getting
away from city lights to watch the flurry.

(Note: Perseids favor northern latitudes. Because of the way Comet
Swift-Tuttle's orbit is tilted, its dust falls on Earth's northern
hemisphere. Meteors stream out of the constellation Perseus, which is
barely visible south of the equator.)

Later that night, observers in North America can see the "traditional
Perseid peak" caused by the older dust from Swift-Tuttle. "Expect 40 to
60 meteors per hour, some of them bright," says Cooke.

The best time to look for these "traditional Perseids" is during the
hours before dawn on Thursday, August 12th. Set your alarm for 2 o'clock
in the morning; go outside; lie down on a sleeping bag with your toes
pointed northeast. You'll soon see meteors racing along the Milky Way.

Can't wake up at 2 a.m.?

Try looking around 9 or 10 p.m. on Wednesday, Aug. 11th when Perseus is
hanging low in the eastern sky. You won't see many meteors then, but the
ones you do see could be memorable. Shooting stars that emerge from the
horizon and streak horizontally through the atmosphere are called
"Earthgrazers." Slow and colorful Earthgrazers are a good target for
city dwellers, because they are so bright.

Dust from Comet Swift-Tuttle hits Earth. What about the comet itself?

Americans Lewis Swift and Horace Tuttle, working independently, discovered
the comet in 1862, and they watched the Aug. 11th filament billow into
space. Three years later Giovanni Schiaparelli (of Martian "canali"
fame) realized it was the source of the Perseid meteors. He understood
that the comet could come close to Earth, but in those days no one
worried about such things.

The idea that comets and asteroids might threaten our planet was not
widely accepted until the 1980s. Then astronomers began to worry. Comet
Swift-Tuttle is big, about the same size as the asteroid that wiped out
dinosaurs 65 million years ago, and as recently as 1992 it seemed that
Swift-Tuttle might strike Earth in the year 2126. New data and
calculations show otherwise, though. There's no danger of a collision
for at least a millennium and probably much longer.

So relax. Enjoy the show. Perseids are harmless ... and beautiful. This is
an unusually good year to see for yourself
Received on Mon 28 Jun 2004 12:07:23 AM PDT


Help support this free mailing list:



StumbleUpon
del.icio.us
reddit
Yahoo MyWeb