A Magical Morning
The Orionid meteor shower peaks this week on Thursday morning, Oct. 21st.
It's going to happen, in plain view--no telescope required, on Thursday morning, Oct. 21st.
Right: This is what an early-morning meteor looks like. Photo credit: Simon Filiatrault of Quebec, Canada. [More]
Go outside before sunrise, around 5:30 a.m. is best, and look east. The brightest object in that direction is the planet Venus. It looks like a star going supernova. Above Venus lies Saturn, and below, near the horizon, is Jupiter. Every 10 minutes or so you'll see a meteor streak among these planets. The meteors are pieces of Halley's Comet.
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"It's not an intense shower," he says, "but it is a pretty one."
Astronomers call it the "Orionid meteor shower," because the meteors appear to stream out of a point (called "the radiant") in the constellation Orion. The radiant is near Orion's left shoulder. But don't stare at that spot, advises Cooke. Meteors near the radiant seem short and stubby, a result of foreshortening. Instead, look toward any dark region of the sky about 90 degrees away. The vicinity of Venus or Jupiter is good. You'll see just as many Orionids there, but they will seem longer and more dramatic.
Above: A map of the morning sky on Thursday, Oct. 21st at 5:30 a.m., viewed facing southeast.
Framing the scene are several bright stars: Sirius, Regulus, Procyon and others. Pay special attention to Castor and Pollux in Gemini. They're arranged in an eye-catching line with Saturn.
To sum it up in one word: "sparkling." Two more words: "early" and "cold." Or how about "worth waking up for?" You decide.
More about the Orionids
The Orionids are related to the eta Aquarids, a southern hemisphere meteor shower in May. Both spring from Halley's Comet.
In 1986, the last time Comet Halley swung past the Sun, solar heating evaporated about 6 meters of dust-laden ice from the comet's nucleus. That's typical, say researchers. The comet has been visiting the inner solar system every 76 years for millennia, shedding layers of dust each time.
At first, the bits of dust simply follow the comet, which means they can't strike our planet. Earth's orbit and Halley's orbit, at their closest points, are separated by 22 million km (0.15 AU). Eventually, though, the dust spreads out and some of it migrates until it is on a collision course with Earth.
Right: The European Space Agency's Giotto probe captured this close-up image of the nucleus of Halley's comet. The bright jets are spewing dusty debris. [more]
"The orbital evolution of Halley's dust is a very complicated problem," notes Cooke. No one knows exactly how long it takes for a dust-sized piece of Halley to move to an Earth-crossing orbit -- perhaps centuries or even thousands of years. One thing is certain: "Orionid meteoroids are old."
They're also fast. "Orionid meteoroids strike Earth's atmosphere traveling 66 km/s or 148,000 mph," he continued. Only the November Leonids (72 km/s) are faster. Sometimes fast meteors explode, and they leave glowing "trains" (incandescent bits of debris in their wake) that last for several seconds to minutes. These trains, blown by upper atmospheric winds into twisted and convoluted shapes, can be even prettier than the meteors themselves.
You never know what you might see, before sunrise, on a magical Thursday morning.