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| 1 | 2 | 3 | » Stats |
Members: 48,633
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Top Poster: glsammy (14,776) | | Welcome to our newest member, yvonnem | |  | 
11-08-2006, 02:52 PM
|  | Knight Commander of the Wild Empire | | Join Date: Sep 2004 Location: Bolton
Posts: 5,735
| | | Shooting Stars Sunday Night
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11-08-2006, 03:01 PM
|  | Dame Commander of the Wild Empire | | Join Date: Feb 2006 Location: North Kent
Posts: 9,520
| | | Re: Shooting Stars Sunday Night Mmm. Interesting. I shall make sure my eye is naked as suggested then.
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11-08-2006, 03:25 PM
|  | Knight Commander of the Wild Empire | | Join Date: Jun 2005 Location: N.E.SOMERSET
Posts: 8,982
| | | Re: Shooting Stars Sunday Night Is the pleides meteor shower ? there was a thread already running
by senua
__________________ Your garden their refuge, a jig-saw of habitats for wildlife under pressure | 
11-08-2006, 03:34 PM
|  | Administrator and Commander of the Wild Empire | | Join Date: Aug 2004 Location: On the Malvern Hills
Posts: 3,825
| | | Re: Shooting Stars Sunday Night I couldn't get the link to work, it just went straight through to aol's main page, but funny you should mention this...
Last night I stood out in the back garden to look at the very large and bright moon, and after about 10 seconds a shooting star flew over - but it looked more like a fireball with a fizzing trail
It was only for a second or two and I thought my eyes were playing ticks on me so I went to bed
Do they come with fizzing trails normally? I think I've only ever seen them as a fast white dot with a bit of a faint trail behind
Stu | 
11-08-2006, 03:43 PM
|  | Knight of the Wild Empire | | Join Date: Mar 2006 Location: Sheffield
Posts: 8,627
| | | Re: Shooting Stars Sunday Night Quote: |
Originally Posted by StuartDH I couldn't get the link to work, it just went straight through to aol's main page, but funny you should mention this...
Last night I stood out in the back garden to look at the very large and bright moon, and after about 10 seconds a shooting star flew over - but it looked more like a fireball with a fizzing trail
It was only for a second or two and I thought my eyes were playing ticks on me so I went to bed
Do they come with fizzing trails normally? I think I've only ever seen them as a fast white dot with a bit of a faint trail behind
Stu | What was your last drink Stu | 
11-08-2006, 04:32 PM
|  | Knight Commander of the Wild Empire | | Join Date: Sep 2004 Location: Bolton
Posts: 5,735
| | | Re: Shooting Stars Sunday Night For anyone else whio could not see the text here is the text from AOL
Have you ever seen a shooting star blaze across a dark night sky? It's an exciting sight, caused by the debris from a comet burning up in our atmosphere.
- Search for more on meteor showers
Comets leave a trail of dust and ice behind them, and when the Earth crosses this trail, this cosmic waste burns up in our atmosphere. From our perspective here on Earth, this gives the effect of a trail of light shooting across the sky. This trail of light is what we call a meteor, or a shooting or falling star.
Meteors can be seen all year round, but at certain times of year there is an extra burst of activity called a meteor shower. This happens when the Earth crosses the orbit of a comet. The Earth follows the same path around the Sun every year, so it always crosses a comet trail at the same point in its orbit, and we see meteor showers at the same time every year.
Each meteor in a shower appears to come from the same place in the sky, known as the 'radiant'. Each meteor shower is named after the constellation in which the radiant appears to be located. So, for example, the Geminids all appear to emanate from the constellation Gemini, and the Leonids seem to be coming from Leo.
The next major shower will be the Perseids, which will peak on 13 August. Why not check it out? You don't even need any special equipment, as a meteor shower is best observed through the naked eye.
Just position yourself somewhere warm and comfortable, and look up at the right part of the sky – in this case, the constellation Perseus, the hero.
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