PERSEID METEORS TO REACH PEAK ACTIVITY ON 12 AUGUST

PERSEID METEORS TO REACH PEAK ACTIVITY ON 12 AUGUST

PERSEID METEORS TO REACH PEAK ACTIVITY ON 12 AUGUST

The annual Perseid meteor shower is set to light up the skies over the UK [and much of the rest of the world] on the night of 12-13 August. The new Moon will mean a darker sky and perfect conditions (given clear skies) for one of the summer months’ most breath-taking spectacles.

The Perseid meteors seem to come from a single point, the ‘radiant,’ situated in the constellation Perseus, giving the shower its name. This is however just an effect of perspective, as the meteors move parallel to each other, much like drivers see when driving in heavy rain.

The radiant will be visible from around 10 pm and at this time there will be the highest chance of seeing ‘Earth grazing meteors.’ These are meteors that skim the Earth’s atmosphere and so have long, blazing tails.

Observers can expect to see a few tens of meteors per hour, or one every few minutes, once darkness has fallen on 12 August. The number of meteors will peak in the early hours of 13 August, when up to around seventy each hour should be visible.

Meteors (also known as ‘shooting stars’) are small particles of dust, some as small as grains of sand, entering our atmosphere at high speed. The friction as they pass through causes the air around the meteor to heat up dramatically, resulting in a characteristic brief bright streak of light.

Meteor showers occur when the Earth passes through a clump of debris in space, as our planet moves along its orbit around the Sun. The dust causing this shower comes from a comet known as Swift-Tuttle, which last passed near Earth in 1992 and orbits the Sun approximately once every 133 years. The meteor shower is actually the Earth moving into the dust and rock left by the comet, which will next come close to Earth in an extremely near miss in 2126.

The shower will be visible all over the UK [and Europe, North America, etc.), as long as the skies are clear. Unlike a lot of celestial events, meteor showers are easy to watch and no special equipment is needed, although a reclining chair and a blanket make viewing much more comfortable.

Most importantly it will help to be away from artificial light, so observers are advised to avoid built-up areas if possible, and to try to find an unobstructed view of the sky towards the east. The Perseids are active from mid-July to mid-August, but for most of that time only a few meteors per hour are visible. So if clouds do make viewing impossible this weekend, the showers will continue for a few days more with reduced activity.

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the solar system is probably most purely, simply fun exploratory experience humans will ever get to have, because there’s nobody there! there’s no colonialism and we don’t have to worry about aliens yet, so its just. fun!

we just land a robot on an empty planet and make it do wheelies and every few days we find like a cool rock and scientists yell about it on twitter

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condemned/forbidden area or building: *is rumored to be haunted/a place where supernatural or otherwise unexplained events have occured*

me:

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No friend

Don’t be cry, have a fry

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Congratulations fellow Earthlings!

We have successfully put NASA’s InSight lander on the surface of Mars, where it will be critical in helping us understand what’s going on beneath the surface of the Red Planet. 🙌🏾

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The lander will use its sensitive instrumentation to learn more about “marsquakes” that shake the planet every now and then.

Unlike quakes on Earth, marsquakes aren’t the result of tectonic activity. Instead, scientists think these shakes are created as Martian rock slowly cools.

InSight will effectively be able to map the Martian interior as these quakes hit.

The lander is also expected to piece together the history of Mars formed by studying its interior, information that could help us understand the formation of planets outside of our solar system in the future.

NASA scientists predict that they will begin receiving the most pertinent data from InSight around March 2019, and can then begin updating what we know about the goings on beneath Mars’ surface… including whether (as the current hypothesis suggests) there is actually water hidden beneath the planet’s crust.

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I've Never Identified With Anything More Tbh

I've never identified with anything more tbh


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Hey. Reach out your hand I got something for ya.

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