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.

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23 Responses to Quadrantid Meteors Early Friday Morning!

  1. Kiki the Great says:

    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. Robert Coontz (Administrator) says:

    The meteor shower is Friday morning. Some MBers are already back in school.

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  3. speller73 says:

    Really? I don’t have school, but I do need more sleep.

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  4. KaiYeves says:

    No way is my mum going to let me wake up that early.

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  5. Vixen in the Eyes of the Moon says:

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

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  6. Kiki the Great says:

    2- Really? Wow, I pity them. NO SCHOOL TILL MONDAY FOR ME! :D

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  7. Purple Panda says:

    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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  8. Jadestone says:

    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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  9. Beavo the Online Stalker Spy Dude Person says:

    Ooh! Quadrantid meteors! How exciting!

    Mom, what are Quadrantid meteors?

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  10. Kiki the Great says:

    Wait- so these are tonight, generally speaking?

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  11. Robert Coontz (Administrator) says:

    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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  12. Purple Panda says:

    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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  13. KaiYves says:

    I saw the Geminids back in mid-December with my brothers. Very cool.

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  14. speller73 says:

    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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  15. Jadestone says:

    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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  16. Purple Panda says:

    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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  17. Robert Coontz (Administrator) says:

    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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  18. NerdAndProudOf It says:

    i didnt see it. i was asleep.

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  19. Vendaval says:

    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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  20. Lawrence of Antarctica says:

    Completely missed it.

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  21. NerdAndProudOf It says:

    like i already said, so did i. But didn’t ANYONE see it? i want to hear about it.

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  22.  ¡ Red-tailed HAWK!  [9,951 piepoints ©] [16 spdzk points] says:

    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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  23. KaiYves says:

    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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