A Sky & Telescope press release

Contacts:
J. Kelly Beatty, Senior Editor
855-638-5388 x22168, [email protected]

Alan M. MacRobert, Senior Editor
855-638-5388 x22151, [email protected]

Note to Editors/Producers: This release is accompanied by publication-quality illustrations; see details below.

If it’s clear Wednesday night and Thursday before dawn, keep a lookout high overhead for the "shooting stars" of the Geminid meteor shower. That's the peak night for this annual display.

Sky & Telescope magazine predicts that, if you are viewing under a clear, dark sky, you might see a Geminid meteor every minute or two, on average, from 10 p.m. local time on December 13th until dawn on December 14th.

“The Geminids are usually one of the two best meteor showers of the year,” says Alan MacRobert, senior editor at Sky & Telescope. “Sometimes they’re more impressive than the better-known Perseids of August.”

If it's cloudy on the night of the peak, some Geminid meteors should still be visible for a few nights before and after the peak. If you live under the artificial skyglow of light pollution, you'll see fewer meteors overall, but the brightest ones will shine through. This year there'll be no interference from a thin waning crescent Moon, which doesn't rise until after 3 a.m.

How To Watch for Meteors

To watch for meteors, you need no equipment other than your eyes. But you'll see more of them if you allow at least 20 minutes for your eyes to adapt to the darkness. Find a dark spot with an open view of the sky and no glaring lights nearby. Bundle up as warmly as you can in many layers. “Go out late in the evening, lie back in a reclining lawn chair, and gaze up into the stars,” advises MacRobert. “Be patient.”

If you trace each meteor’s direction of flight backward far enough across the sky, you’ll find that this imaginary line crosses a spot in the constellation Gemini near the stars Castor and Pollux. Gemini is low in the eastern sky during late evening and climbs to high overhead in the hours after midnight (for skywatchers at north temperate latitudes). This special spot is called the shower’s radiant. It’s the perspective point from which all the Geminids, which travel in parallel through space, would appear to come if you could see them approaching from far away.

"Don't fixate on looking toward Gemini," advises S&T senior editor Kelly Beatty. "Geminids can appear anywhere in the sky, so the best direction to watch is wherever your sky is darkest, which is probably straight up." Small particles create tiny, quick streaks. The occasional bright one might leave a brief train of glowing smoke.

You can start looking for this shower's meteors as early as 7 p.m., roughly 3 hours after sunset, because by then the constellation Gemini has risen over the eastern horizon. You'll see fewer meteors early in the evening, but they'll be longer, dramatic steaks continuing for a few seconds as they graze sideways through Earth's uppermost atmosphere.
Learn more about meteors and meteor watching.

Source of the Geminid Meteors

Geminid meteors are created by tiny bits of rocky debris (mostly the size of sand grains to peas) shed from a small asteroid named 3200 Phaethon, which was discovered in 1983. Before then no one knew the source of the Geminid shower, which had been recognized as an annual phenomenon in 1862.

Phaethon is small, only about 3 miles across, and it loops around the Sun every 1.4 years in an orbit that approaches the Sun closer than any other known asteroid. Some researchers call Phaethon a "rock comet" that sheds dusty debris each time it nears the Sun, when its surface becomes heated to roughly 1,300°F (700°C).

Over the centuries, these bits of Phaethon have spread all along the asteroid’s orbit to form a sparse, moving “river of rubble” that Earth passes through in mid-December each year. The particles are traveling 22 miles per second (79,000 mph) with respect to Earth at the place in space where we encounter them. So when one of them dives into Earth’s upper atmosphere, about 50 to 80 miles up, air friction vaporizes it in a quick, white-hot streak.

By coincidence, Phaethon itself is passing its closest Earth in mid-December and will appear its brightest one night after the Geminid maximum. But this visitor will still be quite faint, about 11th magnitude, which requires a moderate-size backyard telescope to see well. Go to http://skyandtelescope.org/observing/3200-phaethon/ for more information about this appearance and detailed sky charts for finding it in the sky.

More about Light Pollution

Light pollution in the sky doesn’t interfere just with meteor watching. It’s the bane of everyone from backyard nature lovers to professional deep-space researchers. But most light pollution is unnecessary. It results from wasted light beamed uselessly sideways or upward from all of the poorly designed and improperly aimed outdoor lighting for many miles around.

This waste can be prevented by installing modern, fully shielded fixtures, and by aiming fixtures more downward toward the ground where the light is wanted. These simple steps not only reduce light pollution in the sky but also allow great savings of electricity. "Be aware that some LED fixtures emit harsh, blue-hued light that makes it especially difficult to see the stars," notes Beatty. To avoid this harshness, the International Dark-Sky Association recommends that you install LEDs with a "color temperature" (marked on the packaging) that's no greater than 3000K.


Sky & Telescope is making a publication-quality illustration available to our colleagues in the news media. Permission is granted for one-time, nonexclusive use in print and broadcast media, as long as appropriate credit (as noted in the caption) is included. Web publication must include a link to SkyandTelescope.com.

Geminids in 2017 at 9 pm
This should be a good year for the Geminids. There’s almost no moonlight to interfere with observing, and the shower reliably produces a high meteor count. Start looking for them about 2 hours after sunset.
Sky & Telescope / Gregg Dindermann
Geminids in 2017 at 2am
This should be a good year for the Geminids. There’s almost no moonlight to interfere with observing. If your sky is clear and dark, you'll see the most meteors in the hours after midnight — when the shower's radiant is highest in the sky.
Sky & Telescope / Gregg Dinderrmann

 

Geminid meteor crosses Orion
During the 2004 Geminid meteor shower, Alan Dyer caught a bright fireball with a tripod-mounted digital camera. He used a wide-field, 16-mm lens for a 1-minute exposure at f/2.8 with an ISO setting of 800. Expect to shoot a lot of frames before you get this lucky.
Sky & Telescope / Alan Dyer
Phaethon's orbit
Phaethon completes an orbit around the Sun every 1.4 years. Its path is highly elongated, much like a comet's. Perhaps it is an extinct comet, or maybe it's a true asteroid that is cracking and shedding rocky bits when closest to the Sun.
Sky & Telescope diagram