StarDate: Leonid Meteor Shower Peaks November 17

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Expand view Topic review: StarDate: Leonid Meteor Shower Peaks November 17

Re: StarDate: Leonid Meteor Shower Peaks November 17

by Matteo Morino » Tue Nov 23, 2010 3:46 pm

Thanks Chris,
it's very interesting for me! I'd like to install a similar in my observatory.
Thanks for details and photo.
Matteo

Re: StarDate: Leonid Meteor Shower Peaks November 17

by Chris Peterson » Tue Nov 23, 2010 2:59 pm

Matteo Morino wrote:This is a webcam!!??
Only 50 Leonids but... ....very fine!
Thanks. It's an inexpensive B&W video camera with a fisheye lens.
camera2.jpg

Re: StarDate: Leonid Meteor Shower Peaks November 17

by Matteo Morino » Tue Nov 23, 2010 9:39 am

Chris Peterson wrote:I had kind of cloudy, snowy weather this year, so I only captured 50 Leonids over three nights. Hoping to do better with the upcoming Geminids, which is usually the best meteor shower of the year.
Some more info about the meteors I recorded, including some videos, is
here.
This is a webcam!!??
Only 50 Leonids but... ....very fine! :wink:
Matteo

Re: StarDate: Leonid Meteor Shower Peaks November 17

by Chris Peterson » Mon Nov 22, 2010 11:42 pm

I had kind of cloudy, snowy weather this year, so I only captured 50 Leonids over three nights. Hoping to do better with the upcoming Geminids, which is usually the best meteor shower of the year.
Some more info about the meteors I recorded, including some videos, is
here.

Re: StarDate: Leonid Meteor Shower Peaks November 17

by owlice » Mon Nov 22, 2010 12:37 am

Fixed; I'd accessed the image earlier, so pulled it out of my cache and attached it.

Re: StarDate: Leonid Meteor Shower Peaks November 17

by bystander » Sun Nov 21, 2010 10:09 pm

403 Forbidden
You don't have permission to access /o4/32/739432/1/130467466.07FKF1w6.IMG_5914aLeonid.jpg on this server.
Apache/2.0.58 (Unix) Server at i.pbase.com Port 80


BTW: It also requires public access to the image.

Re: StarDate: Leonid Meteor Shower Peaks November 17

by Dick Dionne » Sun Nov 21, 2010 9:48 pm

Beginners luck...... (or not?)
Would the original image be more desirable than a cropped image?
Bet you can't tell I'm new to this.
http://i.pbase.com/o4/32/739432/1/13046 ... Leonid.jpg
[attachment=0]leonid.jpg[/attachment][/i]
Attachments
Click to view larger image
Click to view larger image

Re: StarDate: Leonid Meteor Shower Peaks November 17

by bystander » Sun Nov 21, 2010 5:57 pm

Dick Dionne wrote:Beginners luck...... (or not?)
Would the original image be more desirable than a cropped image?
Bet you can't tell I'm new to this.
http://www.pbase.com/redionne/image/130467466
Welcome aboard, Dick.

It depends on the size of the original and the intent of the photographer whether or not the original is preferable. I think for this, the crop is appropriate. However, for posting images with any of the img tags, links to the actual image are required, not links to pages where the image is displayed. See below for more information.

How to post images

Re: StarDate: Leonid Meteor Shower Peaks November 17

by Dick Dionne » Sun Nov 21, 2010 5:16 pm

Beginners luck...... (or not?)
Would the original image be more desirable than a cropped image?
Bet you can't tell I'm new to this.
http://www.pbase.com/redionne/image/130467466

StarDate: Leonid Meteor Shower Peaks November 17

by bystander » Fri Nov 12, 2010 6:04 pm

Leonid Meteor Shower Peaks Wednesday, November 17, 2010
StarDate | 12 Nov 2010
This year, the Leonid meteor shower best viewing will be in the two to three hours before dawn on November 17 and 18, according to the editors of StarDate magazine.

There is always some uncertainty in the number of meteors the Leonid shower will produce, but viewers should expect to see at least 20 meteors per hour if they have clear skies. The nearly full Moon will set several hours before dawn, and therefore not wash out any meteors in the hours immediately before dawn.

Leonid meteors appear to fall from the constellation Leo, the lion, but they are not associated with it. They are leftover debris from comet Tempel-Tuttle. As the comet orbits the Sun, it leaves a trail of debris. The Leonids meteors recur each year when Earth passes through the comet’s debris trail.

Each time comet Tempel-Tuttle gets closest to the Sun in its orbit, called "perihelion," it sheds a significant amount of material. This creates clumps along its orbit. If Earth passes through one of these clumps this year, viewers could see hundreds of meteors per hour at the shower's peak. If Earth simply passes through the "normal" part of the comet's debris trail, the number of meteors visible will be much lower.

For your best view, get away from city lights. Look for state or city parks or other safe, dark sites. Lie on a blanket or reclining chair to get a full-sky view. If you can see all of the stars in the Little Dipper, you have good dark-adapted vision.

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