Meteor alert, the Leonid meteor storm
Moderators: Phaseolus, Crazy Bob, Fons, eddydevries, Bollivierke, Ord€p, Craft, Math Murderer
- airis
- Euro-Master
- Posts: 1382
- Joined: Tue Apr 30, 2002 10:54 am
- Location: Rovaniemi, Lapland, Finland
Meteor alert, the Leonid meteor storm
The Leonid meteor storm is coming. The first peak is on Tuesday morning November 19th between 4 am and 6 am CET. In Europe you could see 500 or even 1000 meteors (shooting stars) per hour. The second peak seen in North America is even better - as many as 2000 meteors per hour.
This kind of meteor storms are very rare so I hope the sky is clear.
Nasa has calculated meteor rates for 58 cities around the world: http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2002 ... recast.htm
More information: http://www.spaceweather.com/
This kind of meteor storms are very rare so I hope the sky is clear.
Nasa has calculated meteor rates for 58 cities around the world: http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2002 ... recast.htm
More information: http://www.spaceweather.com/
Re: Meteor alert, the Leonid meteor storm
If the sky is clear you should have a good change to see a great show: Lappland is the darkest place in Europe. (map: http://www.dark-skies.org/images/imgarc ... MSP-LG.jpg ) The 'light pollution' affects a great deal when observing sky. Astronomical organizations have even campaigns for dark skies:airis wrote:The Leonid meteor storm is coming. The first peak is on Tuesday morning November 19th between 4 am and 6 am CET. In Europe you could see 500 or even 1000 meteors (shooting stars) per hour. The second peak seen in North America is even better - as many as 2000 meteors per hour.
This kind of meteor storms are very rare so I hope the sky is clear.
http://www.darksky.org/
http://www.dark-skies.org/main.shtm
- airis
- Euro-Master
- Posts: 1382
- Joined: Tue Apr 30, 2002 10:54 am
- Location: Rovaniemi, Lapland, Finland
Re: Meteor alert, the Leonid meteor storm
Nice links.K3lvin wrote:If the sky is clear you should have a good change to see a great show: Lappland is the darkest place in Europe. The 'light pollution' affects a great deal when observing sky. Astronomical organizations have even campaigns for dark skies.
Yes, fortunately the sky is still dark over countryside. I really hate the 'light pollution' even over Rovaniemi. If the sky is clear I´ll walk away from street lights and watch the show on river ice.
- bhoeyb
- Euro-Master
- Posts: 4268
- Joined: Thu Apr 18, 2002 3:58 pm
- Location: Herentals - Belgium
- Contact:
Re: Meteor alert, the Leonid meteor storm
I can't walk away from the light pollution anymore ... Lights everywhere. It's never realy dark in Flanders anymore.airis wrote:
Yes, fortunately the sky is still dark over countryside. I really hate the 'light pollution' even over Rovaniemi. If the sky is clear I´ll walk away from street lights and watch the show on river ice.
- Tiger
- Euro-Master
- Posts: 1072
- Joined: Wed May 29, 2002 4:18 pm
- Location: Heverlee, at 100m from Leuven, Belgium
- Contact:
idem here....
I live in a region where there are lots of plants grown. (flowers, tomatoes, etc)
And all those conservatories (serres) make a lot of light
If it's cloudy, the sky is really orange-yellow at night...
I noticed that since a few years even in southern France 'en plein Pyrenées' the sky isn't completely dark at night. You can easily see the horizon of the mountains.
I live in a region where there are lots of plants grown. (flowers, tomatoes, etc)
And all those conservatories (serres) make a lot of light
If it's cloudy, the sky is really orange-yellow at night...
I noticed that since a few years even in southern France 'en plein Pyrenées' the sky isn't completely dark at night. You can easily see the horizon of the mountains.
Tiger : Dutch, English, French, German
Little Spanish and Italian
Trying Finnish and Japanese
Little Spanish and Italian
Trying Finnish and Japanese
- airis
- Euro-Master
- Posts: 1382
- Joined: Tue Apr 30, 2002 10:54 am
- Location: Rovaniemi, Lapland, Finland
I hope there are some bright fire balls too. Once I saw a bright meteor in daylight.
They have added a nice animation. http://www.spaceweather.com/
As a child I lived in a little village and the nearest street lights were over 30 km away. I only had to switch off our outdoor lamp and it was dark.
Once I saw a Russian rocket launch from Plesetsk. First the rocket rised slowly and then it looked like it fell down. Actually it started to fly fast to east. The gas trail was visible for a long time.
BTW I noticed they had switched on the Christmas lights. More light pollution.
They have added a nice animation. http://www.spaceweather.com/
As a child I lived in a little village and the nearest street lights were over 30 km away. I only had to switch off our outdoor lamp and it was dark.
Once I saw a Russian rocket launch from Plesetsk. First the rocket rised slowly and then it looked like it fell down. Actually it started to fly fast to east. The gas trail was visible for a long time.
BTW I noticed they had switched on the Christmas lights. More light pollution.
- airis
- Euro-Master
- Posts: 1382
- Joined: Tue Apr 30, 2002 10:54 am
- Location: Rovaniemi, Lapland, Finland
It´s over now. I saw many meteors last night. First ones at 2 am (all times local).
One meteor exploded and left a beautiful green gas cloud. Then it was cloudy. I saw some meteors between the clouds at 4 am. Then it was cloudy till 6 am.
I thought I won´t see the peak at all. Fortunately the sky was clear from 6 am to 7 am. I saw 3 to 5 meteors per minut or over 200 meteors per hour. http://www.spaceweather.com/ They were really fast. Then it clouded over again and I got home at 8 am. It was -10°C. With warm clothing it wasn´t too cold.
Next I'll wait for the Geminids December 14th. It is one of the best annual meteor showers with about 60 meteors per hour. Today I found out that the next big meteor storm may be Perseids in August 2004.
One meteor exploded and left a beautiful green gas cloud. Then it was cloudy. I saw some meteors between the clouds at 4 am. Then it was cloudy till 6 am.
I thought I won´t see the peak at all. Fortunately the sky was clear from 6 am to 7 am. I saw 3 to 5 meteors per minut or over 200 meteors per hour. http://www.spaceweather.com/ They were really fast. Then it clouded over again and I got home at 8 am. It was -10°C. With warm clothing it wasn´t too cold.
Next I'll wait for the Geminids December 14th. It is one of the best annual meteor showers with about 60 meteors per hour. Today I found out that the next big meteor storm may be Perseids in August 2004.
-
- Euro-Regular
- Posts: 208
- Joined: Sun Sep 29, 2002 12:32 am
- Location: Groningen, The Netherlands