The peak of the summer's best
meteor shower – the Perseids– peaks overnight tonight (Aug. 12), but you'll
need good weather to see it. Just in case your night sky cloudy or hazy, you
can check out the annual meteor shower on webcasts online by Slooh, NASA and
the Virtual Telescope Project.
You can watch the Perseid meteor
shower webcast here, courtesy of the astronomy broadcast service Slooh. The
6-hour webcast begins at 5 p.m. EDT (2100 GMT) and you can watch it directly on
Slooh.com. During the broadcast, viewers can use the hashtag #Slooh on social
media to share Perseids photos, or to ask questions of the experts and
astronomers on the show.
"The Perseids are my favorite
meteor shower, and they'll be the best shower of the year with high rates of
meteors streaking across the sky, and no moonlight to spoil the view,"
said Slooh astronomer Paul Cox in a statement. "If viewers of our live
coverage are lucky enough to have clear skies themselves, they should use
Slooh’s commentary as their meteor watching soundtrack." [Perseid Meteor
Shower 2018: When, Where & How to See It]
NASA will also host a live
Perseids webcast tonight using video from its all-sky cameras at the Marshall
Space Flight Center. The webcast will stream live on the NASA Meteor Watch
Facebook page. It will begin at about 9 p.m. EDT (0100 Aug. 13 GMT) and
continue through the predawn hours of Monday.
"The Perseids are best seen
between about 2 a.m. your local time and dawn," NASA officials with the
Marshall Space Flight Center Meteoroid Environment Office said in an advisory.
"If those hours seem daunting, not to worry! You can go out after dark,
around 9 p.m. local time, and see Perseids. Just know that you won't see nearly
as many as you would had you gone out during the early morning hours."
You can also check out the
Perseids courtesy of the Virtual Telescope project. Astrophysicist Gianluca
Masi will start the broadcast live on Aug. 12 at 4:30 p.m. EDT (2030 GMT).
"This year, because of the
excellent sky conditions ... we will be broadcasting our live feed from
[Italy's] Castel Santa Maria, where the local community is working on a very
important project to restore the local, XVI [16th] century church, of huge
historic and artistic value [that was] damaged by several earthquakes,"
Masi said in a statement.
he Perseid meteor shower occurs
when Earth passes through the path of Comet Swift-Tuttle, running into the
stream of debris that the comet leaves behind. The meteors appear to emanate
from the northern constellation Perseus. Technically speaking, the 2018
Perseids run from July 17 to Aug. 24, but the peak is expected on Sunday (Aug.
12). Skywatchers also have a new moon in the sky, so there won't be much
moonlight washing out the faint stars.
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