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Look for a dark place to enjoy Perseid Meteor Shower this week, Gibraltar Astronomical Society says

This year’s Perseid Meteor Shower should see a splendid show with no Moon to interfere in their majestic display, the Gibraltar Astronomical Society said.

The Society has reminded the public to keep an eye out for the Perseid Meteor Shower, describing it as one of the most anticipated celestial events in the Northern Hemisphere.

“Though the “shooting stars” are already lighting up the skies in small numbers, the pace will accelerate around August 11 and 12, making them easy to view without a telescope from a dark site,” the Society said.

“It is also expected, that even after the peak date, in the early hours of August 12, there will be another rich display on Friday, August 13.”

“Add also into the equation the fact that the Moon will be just three and a half days past new, and setting around 11.21 pm, then the stage is set for a splendid show of the annual Perseids.”

“At peak, hourly rate of the Perseids can reach 100 per hour although most observers under good skies will see closer to 50 per hour and half that from areas that are light polluted.”

“To maximize your shower enjoyment, find as dark a site as possible.”

What are the Perseids?
The Society explained meteors are particles of rock floating about in space released in the tails of comets, which are dirty rocky snowballs in orbit around the Sun.

The Perseids are a result of the Earth flying through the same area of space that Comet Swift Tuttle (26 km wide) flew through in 1992 (the next time will be in 2126)

As each grain slams into the atmosphere at around 60 kilometres per second, it creates a supersonic shock wave that compresses and heats the air in front of it.

This in turn heats the meteoroid white-hot and burns it to soot. At the same time, the grain's passage excites (ionizes) the air molecules along its path. When the molecules relax back to their previous unexcited state, they radiate light. Both the glowing, hot bits of comet dust and trails of ionized air are responsible for the familiar meteor streaks. The average width of a meteor track is about a meter, while the length spans tens of kilometres.
“Not only are Perseids swift, they are also famous for their fireballs,” the Society said.

History of the Perseids Meteor Shower
The Society described how Perseids have been observed since at least AD 36 according to a Chinese record, but were not officially recognised as a recurring meteor shower until the late 1830s, when three European observers independently noted that an unusual number of meteors routinely appeared at the same time each August. Although their work led to the formal acceptance of the ‘shower’, they were not the first to notice their repeated appearances. That honour goes to German and English Catholics who for centuries called the annual August meteor display the ‘Tears of St. Lawrence’, after an early deacon of the church who was put to death by the Roman emperor Valerian on 10th August AD 258.

Where to observe from
“Unfortunately, due to the pandemic, the Gibraltar Astronomical Society will not be organising any outings this year, as we have done for the last 32 years, but you can still observe them, preferably in a dark location,” the Society said.

“Look towards the North East from any place in Gibraltar away from streetlights and light pollution and about 2/3 of the way up from the horizon to straight above. Grab a deck chair, if you are on the beach, and sit back and enjoy the spectacle that the Perseids Meteor Shower could be this year.”

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