Categories: Science

Quadrantid meteor shower peaks as moon creates poor viewing conditions

The Quadrantid meteor shower, the first of the year and one of the best displays, was peaking Wednesday morning amid a bright moon and cloudy weather conditions. 

The full moon will occur on Friday, bringing bright moonlight in the days ahead. 

According to Space.com, the moon’s shine has made it hard to see all but the very brightest meteors this year, which are most visible before the break of dawn. 

Another obstacle is active weather this week over much of the U.S.

WALTER CUNNINGHAM, LAST SURVIVING NASA APOLLO 7 ASTRONAUT, DIES AT 90: ‘TRUE HERO’

FOX Weather reported Tuesday that parts of western Texas could have a shot at a clear view.

False-color image of a rare early Quadrantid, captured by a NASA meteor camera in 2010. 
((NASA/MEO/B. Cooke) )

According to NASA, the Quadrantids originate from the asteroid 2003 EH1.

The shower radiates from the northeast corner of the constellation Boötes, originally known as “Quadrans Muralis.” 

The Quadrantid meteor shower is seen above a park in Yantai, East China’s Shandong Province, in the early morning of Jan. 4, 2022. 
((Photo credit should read Yu Liangyi / Costfoto/Future Publishing via Getty Images))

HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE IMAGE CAPTURES ‘GLITTERING SWARM’ OF STARS ABOUT 28,000 LIGHT-YEARS AWAY

Beginning in late December and running through Jan. 16, the Quadrantids peak for just a few hours. 

As many as 200 Quadrantid meteors – and as few as 60 – can be seen per hour under perfect conditions.

NASA’s All Sky cameras captured this image of a Quadrantid meteor overnight, the meteor was moving at 93,000 miles per hour. This one-inch diameter member of the Quadrantid meteor shower leaves a brilliant streak in the north Georgia skies before burning up 44 miles above Earth’s surface.
(NASA’s All Sky cameras)

They are also known for their bright fireball meteors and are best viewed in the Northern Hemisphere. 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP 

Next year is expected to be a better viewing experience, but skywatchers can see the α-Centaurid meteor shower peak just before Valentine’s Day.

Share

Recent Posts

Researchers create revolutionary AI fabric that predicts road damage before it happens

Road crews may soon get a major assist from artificial intelligence. Researchers at Germany's Fraunhofer…

17 hours ago

Retirees lose millions to fake holiday charities as scammers exploit seasonal generosity

The holidays are supposed to be a season of generosity, family and giving back. For…

22 hours ago

National program helps seniors spot scams as losses surge

DENVER – Scams targeting older Americans are surging, and federal officials are warning that the…

1 day ago

How to spot and stop AI phishing scams

Artificial intelligence can do a lot for us. Need to draft an email? AI has…

2 days ago

Space startup unveils 1-hour orbital delivery system

A Los Angeles-based aerospace startup called Inversion Space has unveiled Arc, its first flagship spacecraft…

2 days ago

Don’t fall for fake settlement sites that steal your data

Sometimes, data breaches result in more than just free credit monitoring. Recently, Facebook began paying…

3 days ago