Image Credit & Copyright: Darryl Van Gaal; Annotation: Judy Schmidt
Sunday, August 18, 2013
NASA Photo of the Day
August 13:
Perseid Meteors Over Ontario
Image Credit & Copyright: Darryl Van Gaal; Annotation: Judy Schmidt
Explanation:
Where are all of these meteors coming from?
In terms of direction on the sky, the pointed answer is the
constellation of Perseus.
That is why the meteor shower that peaked over the past few days is known as the
Perseids -- the
meteors
all appear to come from a
radiant toward Perseus.
Three dimensionally, however,
sand-sized debris
expelled from Comet Swift-Tuttle
follows a well-defined orbit about our Sun,
and the part of the orbit that approaches Earth is
superposed in front of the Perseus.
Therefore, when Earth crosses this orbit, the
radiant point of falling debris appears in Perseus.
Pictured above,
a composite of 13 early images from this year's
Pereids meteor shower shows many
bright meteors that
streaked
through the sky the night of August 11 near
Oakland,
Ontario,
Canada.
Image Credit & Copyright: Darryl Van Gaal; Annotation: Judy Schmidt
Labels:
cool stuff
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