[MIham] The eta Aquarid Meteor Shower
FSK
n8uvi at localnet.com
Wed May 4 22:40:28 EDT 2005
Space Weather News for May 4th
http://spaceweather.com
Earth is about to glide through a stream of space dust trailing Halley's
Comet, producing a mild but beautiful shower of meteors called the eta
Aquarids. The shower is most intense over the southern hemisphere, where
dark-sky observers might see one meteor every few minutes or so. Northern
hemisphere rates are much lower but not zero.
When should you look? The shower's peak spans May 5th and 6th. Try the
hours before local dawn on both dates.
Eta Aquarid meteors emerge from a point in the constellation Aquarius that
is, coincidentally, close to the planet Mars. Mars is approaching Earth for
a close encounter later this year; already it's one of the brightest objects
in the pre-dawn sky. So if you wake up early in the days ahead to look for
meteors, you can see Mars, too--a nice bonus.
Visit http://spaceweather.com for sky maps and more information.
Checkout My Place on the Web @ http://www.qsl.net/n8uvi
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