CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida — The Eta Aquarids meteor shower occurs during the predawn mornings from May 3rd to May 8th, 2015. The meteor shower peaks on the night of May 5th into the morning of May 6th.
While not as intense or brilliant as other meteor showers during 2015, Eta Aquarid meteors are known for their speed – traveling at about 66 km/s (148,000 mph) into Earth’s atmosphere. Fast meteors can leave glowing “trains” (incandescent bits of debris in the wake of the meteor) which last for several seconds to minutes.
Eta Aquarids are pieces of debris left over from comet 1P/Halley. Every 76 years, Halley’s Comet returns to the inner solar system and its nucleus sheds a layer of ice and rock into space. The dust grains left by Halley’s Comet eventually become the Eta Aquarids in May and the Orionids in October if they collide with Earth’s atmosphere.
When to watch tonight’s meteor shower
Where to watch the Eta Aquarid meteor shower
Where to look for the Eta Aquarid meteors
Lie on your back and look straight up. You can tell if a meteor belongs to a particular shower by tracing back its path to see if it originates near a specific point in the sky, called the radiant. The constellation in which the radiant is located gives the shower its name. In this case, Eta Aquarids appear to come from a point in the constellation of Aquarius. The NASA video below shows how to find the Aquarius constellation.
Aquarius is higher up in the sky in the Southern Hemisphere than it is in the Northern Hemisphere. In the Northern Hemisphere, Eta Aquarid meteors can be seen as “earthgrazers.” Earthgrazers are long meteors that appear to skim the surface of the Earth at the horizon.
Image and Video Credit: NASA
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