Jimmy Snyder
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Strap on your helmets boys and girls, and keep the dinosaurs inside. The Perseid meteor shower will peak tomorrow night.
The discussion revolves around the Perseid meteor shower, including participants' experiences observing the event, challenges posed by weather and light pollution, and comparisons to past meteor showers and other celestial phenomena. The scope includes observational accounts and personal reflections rather than technical analysis or predictions.
Participants generally share personal experiences of viewing the Perseids, but there is no consensus on the visibility conditions or the identification of the bright object observed. The discussion remains unresolved regarding the nature of the bright object and the overall experience of the meteor shower.
Limitations include varying local weather conditions, personal biases in observation, and differing levels of light pollution affecting visibility. The discussion does not resolve the identification of the bright object seen by some participants.
, but my bf did, for 20 minutes or so. He said it was cool but not really spectacular.lisab said:I didn't quite make it out of bed to see them, but my bf did, for 20 minutes or so. He said it was cool but not really spectacular.
Monique said:I stared up at the sky last night for about 30 minutes and only saw two. The most spectacular was something very bright slowly moving across the sky, not sure what it was.
I thought the same, but it was really bright: a lot brighter than any star in the sky (and I think satellites are quite dim objects?). I thought it could be an airplane flying at a relatively low altitude, but all the airplanes that I saw had blinking lights and this object was just a bright white spot moving from west to east.lisab said:Maybe a satellite?
ISS, maybe. It is quite large, with big solar arrays.Monique said:I thought the same, but it was really bright: a lot brighter than any star in the sky (and I think satellites are quite dim objects?). I thought it could be an airplane flying at a relatively low altitude, but all the airplanes that I saw had blinking lights and this object was just a bright white spot moving from west to east.
turbo said:ISS, maybe. It is quite large, with big solar arrays.
That definitely was a lot cooler than the Perseids, but with the light pollution that was also harder to miss than the shooting stars.When the station passes over it will travel from a westerly direction, heading in an easterly direction. An average good pass can last about 5 minutes.
The ISS looks like an incredibly bright, fast-moving star and can be mistaken for an aircraft. However, the ISS has no flashing lights and it can be much brighter. It seemingly just glides across the sky. source