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mick silver
21st April 2014, 05:00 PM
Lyrid Meteor Shower Peaks Tonight: How To Watch Live

http://media.zenfs.com/en_us/News/logo/space/space_logo_140.jpg (http://www.space.com/) By by Miriam Kramer, Staff Writer6 hours ago
http://l.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/09Wl09ekCJyQN3RBbf5GAw--/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7Zmk9ZmlsbDtoPTIwMTtxPTc1O3c9MzAw/http://media.zenfs.com/en_US/News/SPACE.com/Lyrid_Meteor_Shower_Peaks_Tonight-ddaef3320d8e93937a0d343d870fb0ef (http://news.yahoo.com/lyrid-meteor-shower-peaks-tonight-watch-live-155913119.html#).
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Astrophotographer Jeff Berkes captured this Lyrid meteor in the marshlands of southern Maryland on April …






The Lyrid meteor shower peaks tonight (April 21) and if Mother Nature spoils your "shooting stars" display with bad weather, you can watch the celestial light show live online with two webcasts.



The annual Lyrid meteor shower (http://www.space.com/23315-lyrid-meteor-shower.html) occurs every year when Earth passes through debris left behind by Comet Thatcher, which makes a full orbit of the sun once every 415 years. At its peak this year — which is expected to happen in the pre-dawn hours Tuesday (April 22) — the Lyrid shower should produce about 20 meteors per hour. You can watch the Lyrid meteor shower webcasts on Space.com (http://www.space.com/19195-night-sky-planets-asteroids-webcasts.html) via the online Slooh community telescope and NASA.
The Slooh webcast will begin at 8 p.m. EDT (0000 April 22 GMT). You can also watch it directly on www.slooh.com (http://www.slooh.com/). NASA's webcast will begin at 8:30 p.m. EDT (0030 April 22 GMT) and last through the night. You can follow NASA's live webcast directly at:
http://www.nasa.gov/topics/solarsystem/features/watchtheskies/lyrids-ustream-2014.html. Both webcasts depend on clear skies for good views of the meteor shower. [Amazing Lyrid Meteor Shower Photos from 2013 (Gallery) (http://www.space.com/20763-lyrid-meteor-shower-photos-2013.html)]
"Best viewing will be midnight until dawn on the morning of April 22, provided you have clear, dark skies away from city lights," NASA officials wrote in a skywatching advisory. "Northern Hemisphere observers will have a better show than those in the Southern Hemisphere."
The Lyrid meteor shower has been observed for nearly 2,600 years. Chinese astronomers were the first to record the meteor display in 687 B.C., Slooh representatives said in a statement.
"This is not one of the top meteor showers of the year like the Perseids and the Geminids, still the Lyrids produce around 20 meteors an hour, and they are moderately fast — coming in at 110,000 miles per hour," Slooh astronomer Bob Berman said in a webcast advisory. "That's about 30 miles per second, which is nearly 60 times faster than a rifle bullet."
Stargazers in dark areas with clear weather could see some meteors. But the waning gibbous moon will probably wash out most of the show this year, meteor shower expert Bill Cooke of NASA told Space.com. "I would not set high expectations," Cooke said.
Lyrid meteors appear to emanate from the star Vega in the constellation Lyra, the Harp.
Meteor showers are created when pieces of space debris strike Earth's upper atmosphere. The bits of dust and rock heat up to extreme temperatures and glow, creating the streaks seen during meteor showers. Meteors compress the air in front of them, which heats the air, and in turn, heats the bits of debris.
When in space, bits of space material — like the debris that creates the Lyrid meteor shower — are known as meteoroids. As they streak through the atmosphere, they are called meteors and any bits of rock that make it to Earth's surface are labeled meteorites.
Editor's Note: If you snap a great photo Lyrid meteor shower that you'd like to share for a possible story or image gallery, send photos, comments and your name and location to managing editor Tariq Malik atspacephotos@space.com.
Follow Miriam Kramer @mirikramer (http://twitter.com/mirikramer) and Google+ (https://plus.google.com/u/0/105854427591981272663/posts). Follow us @Spacedotcom (http://twitter.com/spacedotcom), Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/spacecom) and Google+ (https://plus.google.com/+SPACEcom/posts). Original article on Space.com (http://www.space.com/25568-lyrid-meteor-shower-2014-webcasts.html).


How Meteor Showers Work (Infographic) (http://www.space.com/18507-meteor-showers-shooting-stars-infographic.html)
Meteoroids: Older Than Earth, Bringing Fire (And Life?) From The Sky | Video (http://www.space.com/17957-asteroids-and-meteoroids-older-than-earth-bringing-fire-and-life-from-the-sky-video.html)
Meteor Shower Quiz: How Well Do You Know 'Shooting Stars' (http://www.space.com/15329-meteor-showers-quiz-skywatching.html)

Dogman
21st April 2014, 05:17 PM
Have watched them over the years, when the weather would cooperate (clouds) for over 5 decades and have seen some great fireworks and then again duds.

It is a crap shoot, if the skys will light up or not.

But if the weather is good , nothing beats laying back and sky watching at night and seeing light that is the history of the stars, and if one thinks on how long those protons of light took to reach ones eyes to see.

It is humbling, and with deeper thought shows how insignificant we are on this very small mudball that we call home.

Example , our nearest neighbor as far as galaxies go Andromeda the light we see here is 2.5 or so million years old, so we are looking into the past.

The lyrid shower have the potential of being a good light show.

But this year as others in the past, the weather is going to screw things up here.


Again!

Atocha
21st April 2014, 08:19 PM
Have watched them over the years, when the weather would cooperate (clouds) for over 5 decades and have seen some great fireworks and then again duds.

It is a crap shoot, if the skys will light up or not.

But if the weather is good , nothing beats laying back and sky watching at night and seeing light that is the history of the stars, and if one thinks on how long those protons of light took to reach ones eyes to see.

It is humbling, and with deeper thought shows how insignificant we are on this very small mudball that we call home.

Example , our nearest neighbor as far as galaxies go Andromeda the light we see here is 2.5 or so million years old, so we are looking into the past.

The lyrid shower have the potential of being a good light show.

But this year as others in the past, the weather is going to screw things up here.


Again!


The weather is not cooperating here either. I have never seen the Lyrid Shower.

Dogman
21st April 2014, 09:12 PM
The weather is not cooperating here either. I have never seen the Lyrid Shower.When skywatching in the winter Orion is with out a doubt my favorite and the star factory off his belt. My other favorite is in the direction of Sagittarius looking at our galactic center and all of the interesting things to see with a telescope or very good binoculars. It is all good, but humbling at the same time, time and distance scales that are dam near imposable to wrap ones mind around.

Truly humbling!

But fantastic, if one researches what is seen,

Learn the constellations of all the seasons, and for a kick all of the folk lore behind them.

Starry nights are good for the soul, for the ones that just kicks back and looks up at night!