Orionid meteor โShower โฃPeaks Tonight: Dark Skies Promise a Dazzling Display
October 20, 2024 – Skywatchers are in โคfor a treat as the Orionid meteorโฃ shower reaches its peak tonight, October 20-21. Favorable conditions – โa new โmoon and promising weather forecasts – suggest excellent viewing opportunities for those โขventuring awayโข from city lights.
The orionids are a well-known and reliable meteor โขshower originatingโ from debris left behind by Halley’s Comet, which orbitsโข the Sun approximately every 76 years. As earth passes throughโฃ this trail of dust and small โparticles, they enter our atmosphere at roughly 66 kilometers per second.
“They are smallโข pebbles with a โคdiameter of a few millimeters,” explains Pavol Habuda, โขof the Society for Interplanetary Matter ofโ the Czech Astronomical Society. “They enter the atmosphere at a speed of โฃaboutโ 66 kilometers per second,” adding that they โฃare among the fastest meteors observed.
This high velocity often results in shining meteors โฃleaving glowing trails, known as afterglows, caused by the cooling atmosphere behind the meteor. โ”It’s light from the cooling atmosphere behind the meteor.The brighter the meteor, the stronger the trail,” Habuda explains. The Orionids are known for producing a higher proportion of brightโ meteors, rewarding patientโค observers.
With the peak occurring during a new moon, minimal lunar interference will allow even faint meteors to be visible. Observers can expectโฃ to see up to twenty meteors per hour after midnight. While peak activity is expected tonight, some activity may continue for a โweek โคafterward.
No specialโฃ equipment is neededโค to view the Orionids, only โขyour eyes.โ However, allowing 10-30 minutes for darkโ adaptation is crucial. “Don’t look atโค your cell phone, it disrupts your adaptation to the dark. Use red light, which is less distracting than other colors,” advises Habuda.
The Orionids rank asโ the fifthโ most powerfulโ meteor shower of the year and appear to radiateโ from the constellation โOrion. Notably, Halley’s Comet provides two meteor showers annually: the Orionids โin the โคfall and the รta-Aquarids inโ May.