Quadrantid Meteors Early Friday Morning!

Astronomers say this year’s Quadrantid meteors could be unusually good. A late moonrise could make it possible to see 30 to 60 meteors per hour in the United States and twice that many in Europe.

When to look: the morning of January 4, after midnight blog time (1 a.m. U.S. Eastern time, or before dawn in Europe) — not ideal for a school night, alas. Let us know if you look and what you see.

23 thoughts on “Quadrantid Meteors Early Friday Morning!”

  1. School night? What? The next “school night” is on Sunday! Unless I have a super-long break… FRIDAY IS NOT A SCHOOL NIGHT, I HOPE…

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  2. AWESOME!!!! Iøll look. If the LIGHT POLLUTION ISNØT TOO BAD!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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  3. Kiki (6): I went back on Wednesday. Yes, we’re quite lucky over here. ::grumble::

    That’s 2 am my time, I doubt I’ll be able to stay up and see it. I’ll see what I can do, though.

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  4. Crap, light polution is bad around here, but hopefully… I got up for a meteor shower and an eclips in the fall and didn’t get to see either (at 3, and 4…)

    I shall stay up anyway, though, although as I don’t have a good computer (I am working on the laptop. I hate windows so much. It sucks, to put it bluntly.) I won’t have asmany yummy distractions. Oh well.

    Hmm… it’s too bad the best meteors are viewed just aove the horizon, which I can’t see because of the trees. Sigh.

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  5. Yes, peaking around 1:40 a.m. U.S. Eastern Standard time.

    As for why they’re called the Quadrantids, here’s what spaceweather.com says:

    Quadrantid meteors take their name from an obsolete constellation, Quadrans Muralis, found in early 19th-century star atlases between Draco, Hercules, and Bootes. It was removed, along with a few other constellations, from crowded sky maps in 1922 when the International Astronomical Union adopted the modern list of 88 officially-recognized constellations. The Quadrantids, which were “re-zoned” to Bootes after Quadrans Muralis disappeared, kept their name–possibly because another January shower was already widely-known to meteor watchers as the “Bootids.”

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  6. Would you suggest that a Pittsburgh resident stay up all night to see the meteor shower? Temperature is currently 16 degrees. I can’t decide… ::ponders::

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  7. I tried to look for them, but there is way too much light pollution. It’s kind of sad that there’s a ton of light pollution across the street from a forest preserve.

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  8. I also stayed up and looked, but there is light pollution from the city and I was wearing my glasses, which are a power bhind my contacts, so if there were a few veryvery small dim ones I missed them.

    I did however see an excelent brighter one — I am convinced it was not an airplane, it was going much to fast and it flickered red and white but not at a regular pace, and not blinking. It was very pretty, it’s too bad I hadn’t my contacts in so it was just a bright light going across the sky closeish to the horizon.

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  9. I’m glad you saw something, Jadestone!

    I decided not to stay up, because I had a Chemistry test today and it got down to somewhere around 10 degrees last night, with windchill of -10. I probably wouldn’t have been able to see it anyway, but I wish I could have. I’ve seen one shooting star in my life, while I was sledding with my dad on the way home from a piano lesson.

    Did you see anything, Robert?

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  10. No, alas. I have to get to bed at a reasonable hour on work nights. I’ll let you all know about any meteor showers I hear about, though. A good one is well worth seeing.

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  11. I didn’t see this one, but my family lives about 40 min. from a national beach. There’s something called a “stargazer’s pass” available that lets you get into the parks after closing. This was too cold and at the wrong time, but I have great memories of laying on the beach in a sleeping bag waiting for the stars to come out. You should all be able to escape to a place w/o too much light pollution.

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  12. 21-Jadestone Said she did… faintly :D

    Alas, I might have looked had it not been so cold, and if I had not just returned from my grandmother’s house the previous evening. I love meteor showers, but there is more and more light pollution around here, which is especially bad…

    Red-tailed HAWK :D :D :D

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  13. 22- I hate light pollution. I was at a Scriptwriter’s Camp in November, and I was showing constellations to the other kids. Some were from Queens (NYC) and they said
    “I’ve never seen this many stars in my life.”

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