We went up to a dark spot about 45 minutes east of Salt lake. I saw a spectacular one at 1:12 am about 30 degrees up from the horizon and staying at about that height. It lasted forever, 4 or 5 seconds, and was beautiful. Best I have ever seen. We didn't keep track but I will try to tonight. Seems like one every 5 minutes or so. Nice being out of the valley for a change. Is there a time tonight that is supposed to be the peak? -------------- Original message -------------- From: "Chuck Hards" <chuck.hards@gmail.com>
I settled back for an hour of dedicated watching last night from 2-3 am in my backyard. Observed Perseids came at the rate of one every 5-7 minutes which is phenomenol for a day ahead of the peak; I had ten total for the hour. There were 2 @ mag. 2, most at about mag. 4-5. The brightest ones produced streaks of 10-15 degrees, the dimmer ones considerably shorter. One fairly bright one shot right down between Mars and the Pleiades, really cool. I'm sure if I could have seen the entire sky at once, my total would have been higher. Some surely got away unnoticed. I was also impressed by the number of sporadics noted- I saw seven in that period which is far higher than my usual random backyard rate. Seventeen total meteors in an hour was a good show for a valley location. One sporadic was a "reverse Perseid". It traveled a line almost directly toward the radiant, an amusing surprise. I've got to get up at 4 am Monday morning so I doubt that I'll do much watching tonight, good luck to all who go for it. _______________________________________________ Utah-Astronomy mailing list Utah-Astronomy@mailman.xmission.com http://mailman.xmission.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/utah-astronomy Visit the Photo Gallery: http://www.utahastronomy.com