Thursday, July 22, 2010

Meteors

The Earth travels about the Sun at 30 km/s. When the Earth enters a region containing cometary dust, the particles crash into the upper atmosphere travelling at an amazing 75 km/s. The heat and friction causes the dust to burn - we see them as shooting stars. They appear as streaks of light shooting across the night sky.

Leonid Fireball Meteor, 1966

A Leonid Fireball Meteor from 1966.
Photographer: J. W. Young. Source: TMO, JPL, NASA.

There are a number of meteor showers that can be viewed from Australia. They are named after the stars or constellations from where they appear to begin their journey.

Meteorites are large meteors that pass through the atmosphere and hit the Earth. Everyday tons of meteorite dust can pass through our atmosphere undetected.

Meteor Showers visible from Australia

Meteor Shower Activity Period Maximum Zenith Hourly Rate
p-Puppids March 15 - April 28 April 23 40
h-Aquarids* April 19 - May 28 May 4 50
Perseids July 17 - August 24 August 12 100
Orionids* October 2 - November 7 October 22 30
Leonids November 14 - November 21 November 17 10-20
Geminids December 7 - December 17 December 14 100

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