Community Corner

Sunday's Your Chance to view Perseids Meteor Shower

With mostly clear skies forecast over Chicagoland, we should be able to get a good view of the Perseids meteor shower, which is set to peak this weekend.

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While Sunday night's forecast calls for a chance of rain, Saturday night might be your best bet to view Perseids meteor shower as mostly clear skies are expected. 

(Do you know of a great location to watch the meteor shower in ? Share it in the comments section below!)

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The Perseids are a meteor shower visible when the Earth passes through the tail of the Swift-Tuttle comet. The meteor shower has been visible for about 2,000 years. The Swift-Tuttle comet orbits once every 133 years, according to NASA.

“The Perseids can be seen all over the sky, but the best viewing opportunities will be across the northern hemisphere,” according to a 2011 NASA release. “Those with sharp eyes will see that the meteors appear to radiate from the direction of the constellation Perseus.”

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Viewing Tips

At its peak, the Perseids meteor shower could display up to 40 meteors per hour in the pre-dawn hours Sunday. The American Meteor Society recommends viewing this meteor shower between midnight and dawn Saturday and Sunday.

Space.com has these tips and more:

Get as far away from city and other artificial lights as possible. Meteor showers are best viewed in really dark skies. Try to keep the moon out of your field of vision, too.

Be patient. It may take your eyes a few minutes to adjust to the light and see the meteors.

You don’t need binoculars or a telescope – that will only limit the amount of sky you can see.


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