Re: [Utah-astronomy] Saturday night Perseids
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
On 12 Aug 2007, at 14:41, steve.nielsen@comcast.net wrote:
Is there a time tonight that is supposed to be the peak?
Most of the stuff I've read has indicated simply "after midnight". But the few brave souls who have actually proffered exact times seem to run from 11 p.m. MDT (a tad too early IMHO) to 4 am. Clear skies! (please) Patrick
Don't you just hate it when the universe didn't get the memo? ;o) On 8/12/07, Patrick Wiggins <paw@wirelessbeehive.com> wrote:
On 12 Aug 2007, at 14:41, steve.nielsen@comcast.net wrote:
Is there a time tonight that is supposed to be the peak?
Most of the stuff I've read has indicated simply "after midnight". But the few brave souls who have actually proffered exact times seem to run from 11 p.m. MDT (a tad too early IMHO) to 4 am.
participants (3)
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Chuck Hards -
Patrick Wiggins -
steve.nielsen@comcast.net