Home > India > Report

Meteor shower visible at midnight

Caroline Andrade / DNA
Tuesday, November 17, 2009 9:40 IST
Email Email
Print Print
Share Share

Ahmedabad, Ahmedabad: The Leonid meteor shower, last observed in 2001, will once again be visible, from midnight on Tuesday to 3.30 am the next day.

Narottam Sahoo, senior scientist at the Gujarat Science City, said that between eight and 10 meteors are expected to be visible per minute, according to predictions made by NASA.

"The meteor shower will be visible just above the horizon, and one will not need binoculars to view the event," he said. The Leonid meteor shower produces an average of around 40 meteors per hour at its peak. It has a cyclic peak year every 33 years, with hundreds of meteors visible every hour. The last such event took place in 2001.

The meteor shower peaks this year on Tuesday and Wednesday, but is visible from November 13 through November 20. The moon is set to be out of the way this year, granting an exceptional view of the Leonid meteors.

As the night progresses, the number of meteors visible is expected to rise and the shower is expected to peak between 3.04 am and 3.14 am in the early hours of Wednesday, numbering hundreds of meteors per hour.

To witness the event, the Gujarat Science City has organised an outreach programme and sky observation at the JNV campus at Dehgam. Around 250 meritorious students from Gujarat, Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Goa, Daman and Silvassa, who are attending a five-day regional science congress at JNV, will witness the celestial show, along with around 300 local students

Double click an English word for Macmillan Dictionary definition
Copyright permission mandatory to republish this article.
For reprint rights click here
digg reddit google Facebook MySpace delicious

Girls wanna have fun
Wine connoisseur Shamita Singha hosted a wine appreciation dinner for some of her friends as she took them through a number of wines paired with a four-course meal.
UK throws gauntlet, students pick it up
The UK has laid down a new law for foreign students wishing to study on the island, but that has not stopped a large number of young Bangaloreans from heading there.

Get daily news in your inbox and read it at your convenience.

D 910