Although the Perseids peak the night of the 12th/13th, the debris stream that leads to this meteor shower is fairly broad leading to a good number of meteor a few days before and after. The best time to observe is after midnight...generally the later the better (up to the point when morning twilight begins). The Moon was new on August 10th and sets shortly after the Sun, so you don't compete with moonlight.
The best way to observe meteors is to get to a dark site, away from city lights as much as possible, lay back and look up to the northeast. Technically, you should look toward Perseus, but if you don't know how to find it, northeast is close enough. Scan the sky as meteors can pop up anywhere. Some will be bright, others dim. If you are lucky, you get a fireball. If you are really lucky, you might get one that leaves a smoke trail!
I will be trying some photography of the shower. Got a new timer remote for my camera so I am hoping for some clear skies.Reprinted with permission from the Half-Astrophyscist Blog.
2 comments:
Thanks for the reminder... Im going out to look!
Tonight will be good too. I think I have a plan on how to take pictures while I sleep using a remote timer. I know its a bad idea to make your first test the real event, but I just got the remote timer!
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