Meteor showers occur when the earth, traveling on its annual orbit around the Sun, passes into the dust left behind by a comet. Comets are small icy objects that originate beyond the orbit of Neptune. When they get close to the Sun, the gas and dust they are made of gets heated and their weak gravity cannot hold onto the material. The result is a trail of dust particles left behind in the orbit of the comet. The Earth can pass into this dust and they tiny particles hit the Earth’s atmosphere at high speed and burn up causing a flash of a meteor. On any given night three or four meteors an hour hit the atmosphere per hour. During a meteor shower dozens and sometimes hundreds of meteors per hour can be seen under ideal conditions.
On the nights of August 11 to 13th, the Earth will pass into the orbit of the comet Temple-Tuttle and we will see the annual Perseid meteor shower reach its peak. This year experts are predicting 150 to 200 meteors per hour, about double the usual number for this shower. So this is a great year to watch the Perseids. The shower is named for the constellation Perseus from which the meteors appear to originate. The constellation will be in the northeast direction, but don’t stare towards it, but instead look in all directions since the meteors can hit the atmosphere anywhere in the sky. The shower will peak on the evening of August 11th and the morning of August 12th. The period after midnight is best. Be sure to bring bug spray and a blanket to stay warm. If the weather is poor, remember that the shower lasts several days before and after the peak, so you can go out a night or two before or after the peak and still see the shower.