2 meteor showers will face this evening, could bring 30 filming stars an hour

The aquariids of the southern delta and the alpha capricornides that overlap is a treat for the stars.


Summertime offers many opportunities to connect more deeply with nature, but it is difficult to think of a more appropriate activity for the season than to take a meteor show - ER. Not only is it the time of year when some of the most active and exciting cosmic fireworks shows the calendar, but sweet nights facilitate the exit from the outside and spend a little time look in heaven - without the need for a telescope to do it.

And if you hope to have an overview yourself, this week could be one of your best chances, because two showers of meteors will run up, bringing dozens of shooting stars per hour tonight.

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This year, the conditions promote the aquariids of the southern delta.

THE Aquariids of the southern Delta are not exactly a familiar name with regard to meteor showers. Scientists believe that the underestimated annual event is caused by the land passing through the 96p / Machholz comet dust track, which completes relatively rapid orbits around the sun about twice a decade, by NASA.

This year, the “stars shooting” produced as part of this shower are visible since July 18 and will continue until August 12.

As a rule, Hope viewers can expect to see seven to eight meteors per hour during their peak, if the conditions are correct. As relatively low meteors, there must be little or no light interference from the moon to be visible.

Fortunately, there are two favorable scenarios in this year's lunar calendar. Not only will the meteor shower arrive because the moon will only be 27% in the sky, but the moon will also take place before the radiant point of the shower reaches its highest point in the sky for an ideal vision.

They overlap with alpha capricornides.

But the aquariids of the southern delta are not the only show in town: amateur astronomers also obtain a shower of bonus meteors this week with Alpha capricornides , which reaches a peak at the same time of the night tonight.

This show is created by the trail left by the comet 169p / Neat, an object approximately half the size of 96p / Machholz which completes an orbit completes a little more than four years, according to LiveScience.

Similar to their counterparts, this shower produces relatively few meteors visible with an average of about five to 10 per hour. However, they tend to be a bit A more spectacular view by comparison.

"When they arise, they are this kind of slow fireballs through the sky," Nick Moskovitz , a planetary astronomer from the Lowell Observatory in Arizona, told NPR. "So, if you are looking for this spectacular event to occur during a surveillance session, an alpha capricornid can be the one that excites you the most."

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You may need to stay late for the best vision.

While the two meteor showers may not stand out as the most spectacular season of the season, their evening peak of the evening on July 29 makes it a remarkable evening for the stars. According to Moskovitz, viewers can expect around 20 to 30 meteors per hour.

So when do you have to configure your coverage or your lawn chair for the best results? Because the radiant point of the Delta Southern Delta (or the section of the sky from which they seem to come) of the Aquarius constellation slowly slide in the sky during the night, it will only be after midnight but before sunrise that it is high enough in the sky to produce the maximum number of visible meteors , according to the American Meteor Society.

If you hope for memorable observations of "shooting star", this cosmic confluence could actually be your best bet. This is because the best known and most active shower of summer, the Perseids, does not align well with the lunar calendar.

"The shine of the moon is really a killer, and it will just make the Perseids who are not so convincing this year," Moskovitz told NPR, adding that the almost complete orb just ruined the ability to see all these meteors ".

Here are some tips for looking at the crossing showers.

In addition to hoping for a clear sky in your local weather forecasts this week, there are still a few things that you can control that makes the vision experience even better. As with any stellar event, it is preferable to move away from cities and reverbs in an area with the darkest possible sky, according to NASA.

The warmer summer time makes you easier to make yourself comfortable, but you will always want to make sure you bring a blanket, comfortable clothes, folding chairs or a sleeping bag to make sure you lie down and take everything. And because of their orientation in the sky above, you may want to consider setting up somewhere with a decent view of the southern section of the night sky. Once you are there, go back and try to resist the temptation to scroll.

"Put your mobile phone," Moskovitz told NPR. "Turn off this screen and let your eyes adapt to darkness."


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