Topscmeteors

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TOPICAL SCIENCE August 2017

Comets and Meteor Showers

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More about Comets

Viewing the Persieds

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The Perseid Meteor Shower During the month of August each year, the Perseid Meteor Shower occurs and is visible to viewers in the Northern Hemisphere. This particular shower is named after the constellation Perseus, from which the meteors seem to originate. However, in actual fact, meteors have nothing to do with constellations. The stars, which make up the constellations, are many light-years away, while meteors occur within the atmosphere of our planet Earth. Meteors are sometimes referred to as ‘shooting stars’, or ‘falling stars’, because they do look like stars shooting across the night sky, but they are not stars at all. In fact, they are tiny particles of dirt and debris passing through the earth’s atmosphere at great speed. Some of the particles are as small as grains of sand, while others can be much larger. Because of their speed, they become very hot, as they compress and heat the air in front of them. They glow brightly for a short period, before burning up completely. Each meteor ionises molecules in the air as it goes, causing a bright streak of light for a few seconds. The brightest meteors can be seen with the naked eye and a large meteor shower can be a spectacular sight.

How to observe a meteor shower. Wait for a clear night, with few clouds. Try to find a place well away from the light pollution of street lighting. Allow time for your eyes to become dark adapted. Please note that in 2017, the moon is three-quarters full around the time of the Perseid meteor shower, so the sky will not be quite dark.


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Topscmeteors by Margaret Franklin - Issuu