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The Perseid meteor shower peaks this weekend on a moonless night, offering a prime opportunity to watch shooting stars.
The question remains: Will smoke or clouds obscure our view? | FORECAST
If the skies clear - or you travel to a clear, dark corner of Oregon - the meteor shower will be at its best just before dawn this Sunday.
The shower has actually been going on since July, and will continue through August, as the Earth plows through debris from the comet Swift-Tuttle.
"The Perseids appear to radiate from the constellation Perseus, visible in the northern sky soon after sunset this time of year. Observers in mid-northern latitudes will have the best views," Jane Houston Jones from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, said in this month's What's Up podcast from NASA.
"You should be able to see some meteors from July 17 to August 24th, with the rates increasing during the weeks before August 12 and decreasing after the 13th," according to Jones. "Observers should be able to see between 60 and 70 per hour at the peak. Remember, you don't have to look directly at the constellation to see them. You can look anywhere you want to-even directly overhead."
https://katu.com/news/travel-and-ou...stars-as-meteor-shower-hits-peak-this-weekend
The question remains: Will smoke or clouds obscure our view? | FORECAST
If the skies clear - or you travel to a clear, dark corner of Oregon - the meteor shower will be at its best just before dawn this Sunday.
The shower has actually been going on since July, and will continue through August, as the Earth plows through debris from the comet Swift-Tuttle.
"The Perseids appear to radiate from the constellation Perseus, visible in the northern sky soon after sunset this time of year. Observers in mid-northern latitudes will have the best views," Jane Houston Jones from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, said in this month's What's Up podcast from NASA.
"You should be able to see some meteors from July 17 to August 24th, with the rates increasing during the weeks before August 12 and decreasing after the 13th," according to Jones. "Observers should be able to see between 60 and 70 per hour at the peak. Remember, you don't have to look directly at the constellation to see them. You can look anywhere you want to-even directly overhead."
https://katu.com/news/travel-and-ou...stars-as-meteor-shower-hits-peak-this-weekend



