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The ‘Most Beautiful’ Orionid Meteor Shower Is About To Peak Over MN

L.Thompson29 min ago
The 'Most Beautiful' Orionid Meteor Shower Is About To Peak Over MN One of the year's most dazzling shooting star shows, the Orionid meteor shower, will peak Sunday and Monday.

MINNESOTA — One of the year's most dazzling shooting star shows, the Orionid meteor shower, will peak Sunday and Monday, giving Minnesota stargazers another reason to get outside and look up at the sky.

We'll need clear skies to see the Orionids. The National Weather Service forecast for Minnesota suggests partly cloudy skies.

Unfortunately, October's big, bright supermoon will still be about 80 percent illuminated, which may make it difficult to see all but the brightest meteors — and this shower reliably produces some of the brightest and fastest of any shooting star show.

The Orionid meteor shower, which continues through Nov. 22, usually produces only about 23 meteors an hour at its peak, but NASA nevertheless calls it one of the " most beautiful " shooting star shows of the year.

The meteors are both bright and fast, entering Earth's atmosphere at about 148,000 miles per hour. Meteors that fast can leave glowing trains — that is, incandescent bits of debris that can last several seconds or even minutes — and also fireballs.

This shower is best viewed between the hours of midnight and dawn.

The Taurid meteor shower is also underway.

What makes the long-running Taurid meteor shower unique is that it consists of two separate streams — the first created by grain dust left behind by Asteroid 2004/TG10 , and the second by dust grains left behind by Comet 2P/Encke .

Together, they run from about Sept. 28-Dec 2. Neither the Southern nor the Northern Taurids produce much more than five meteors an hour, but both streams are rich in fireballs and are often responsible for increased numbers of fireball reports, according to the American Meteor Society.

The moon will be about 11 percent full for the Southern Taurids' Nov. 4-5 peak, and about 79 percent full for the Nov. 11-12 peak of the Northern Taurids.

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