by MeteorWayne » Wed May 18, 2011 11:40 pm
The majority of long term data about meteor showers (which come from comets) is from amateurs.
To begin the process of learning how to report what you observe, I suggest the North American Meteor Network site:
http://www.namnmeteors.org/
Once you learn the basics, then you can report your observations directly to the International Meteor Organization:
http://www.imo.net/
If anyone needs any advice during the learning process, feel free to contact me. I have hundreds of hours of observing time, and thousands of meteors in my database.
While video data is increasingly valuable, it always needs to be calibrated against the decades long visual record to correlate the two.
MW
The majority of long term data about meteor showers (which come from comets) is from amateurs.
To begin the process of learning how to report what you observe, I suggest the North American Meteor Network site:
http://www.namnmeteors.org/
Once you learn the basics, then you can report your observations directly to the International Meteor Organization:
http://www.imo.net/
If anyone needs any advice during the learning process, feel free to contact me. I have hundreds of hours of observing time, and thousands of meteors in my database.
While video data is increasingly valuable, it always needs to be calibrated against the decades long visual record to correlate the two.
MW