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- <text id=93TT0215>
- <title>
- Aug. 16, 1993: Forecast:Meteor Deluge
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Aug. 16, 1993 Overturning The Reagan Era
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SPACE, Page 40
- Forecast: Meteor Deluge
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Astronomers expect a spectacular display in the night skies
- </p>
- <p>By LEON JAROFF
- </p>
- <p> After the first hour they spent atop Arizona's Kitt Peak scanning
- the post-midnight skies, the observers knew that their ascent
- to an altitude of more than 6,000 ft. had not been in vain.
- They had counted 33 shooting stars, the advance guard of the
- annual Leonid meteor shower. But none of the University of Arizona
- students could anticipate the spectacle that was still to come.
- In the small hours of that Nov. 17 morning in 1966, the fiery
- meteors began streaking overhead in ever increasing numbers
- until, as one viewer reported in Sky & Telescope magazine, "the
- sky began raining shooting stars."
- </p>
- <p> By 5 a.m., the shower had become an awesome storm, visible over
- large parts of the U.S. Southwest, brightening the sky like
- the grand finale of a fireworks display and causing many startled
- spectators instinctively to shield their face. Interspersed
- with occasional fireballs, the meteors reached an incredible
- peak rate of at least 40 per sec. before the bombardment began
- to wane. Some shooting stars continued to fall until their trails
- were obscured by the glare of the rising sun.
- </p>
- <p> While more modest meteor showers, usually consisting of no more
- than a scattering of shooting stars, take place as often as
- 15 to 20 times each year over various parts of the globe, dramatic
- displays like the 1966 Leonids occur rarely, only a few times
- each century. But the next great meteor storm of the 20th century
- could occur this week--if astronomers' hunches are right.
- Conditions seem ideal, they say, for the annual Perseid meteor
- shower to develop into a vivid display that should be visible
- in many parts of the northern hemisphere on the night of Aug.
- 11-12.
- </p>
- <p> That is when the earth will be passing close to the orbit of
- the comet Swift-Tuttle, which reappeared last year for the first
- time since 1862, swooped around the sun on Dec. 12 and headed
- back toward the outer solar system. Like all other comets, Swift-Tuttle
- sheds debris consisting largely of conglomerations of ice and
- dust, most of it boiled from the comet when it is in the vicinity
- of the sun. This material remains in orbit and gradually disperses
- along the comet's entire path, in effect forming a giant debris-laden
- tube in space. Each August when the earth passes through that
- tube it encounters bits of debris, or meteoroids, which hurtle
- into the atmosphere at 130,000 m.p.h. and, then called meteors
- or shooting stars, are incinerated in streaks of light.
- </p>
- <p> These meteors are known as Perseids because they appear to emanate
- from the constellation Perseus, just as the Leonids, cast-off
- material from another comet, appear to radiate from a point
- in Leo. While most of the cometary debris consists of small
- particles, each tiny piece traveling at such high speed packs
- a mighty wallop capable of inflicting severe damage on anything
- it encounters. Consequently, satellites orbiting above the protective
- atmosphere during a heavy meteor shower are vulnerable. With
- this danger in mind, NASA prudently postponed last week's scheduled
- launch of the shuttle Discovery, which otherwise would have
- been in orbit during the height of the meteor bombardment. Explained
- a NASA spokesman: "It's too uncertain to proceed." Astronomers,
- too, felt concern; they could do nothing to protect the orbiting
- Hubble Space Telescope from the hurtling Perseids.
- </p>
- <p> Predictions of an unusually spectacular Perseid display are
- based on several convincing omens. Astronomer Brian Marsden
- of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics has deduced
- the minimum distance between the orbit of the comet and the
- orbit of the earth on every Swift-Tuttle flyby between 69 B.C.
- and A.D. 3302, "and this time," he says, "it is closer than
- at any other time we've calculated: only 90,000 miles."
- </p>
- <p> Another reason to look for celestial pyrotechnics is the proximity
- of Swift-Tuttle itself; it sailed closest to the earth only
- nine months ago on its 130-year round trip through the solar
- system. The material that boiled off Swift-Tuttle on the current
- loop around the sun is still clinging closely to the comet and
- hence is already far beyond the earth's orbit. But Marsden believes
- that the earth this week "will probably be passing through debris
- that was ejected in 1862, is still relatively close to the comet
- and hasn't had a chance to disperse very much. So the meteors
- should be more concentrated; there should be more of them."
- </p>
- <p> For similar reasons, he suggests, the Perseids were impressive
- in the years around Swift-Tuttle's last flyby in 1862, even
- though the earth's and the comet's orbits came no closer than
- half a million miles at that time. Indeed, two University of
- London astronomers suggested last week that the 1994 Perseids
- might just outperform this year's shower.
- </p>
- <p> Despite the favorable conditions in the heavens, a terrestrial
- factor, cloud cover, could ruin the show for many people (only
- air travelers will have seats above the clouds). And even if
- the skies are clear, Marsden and other astronomers are hedging
- their bets. Predicting meteor showers, they say, is on a par
- with weather forecasting. "The debris is spaced irregularly
- along the orbit," Marsden explains, "and that's where some uncertainty
- comes in." Another factor is the influence of Jupiter's gravity,
- which along with pressure from solar radiation unpredictably
- alters the orbit of the cometary debris.
- </p>
- <p> Should the forecast be on the nose this year, Europe will get
- the best view; there, the meteors will seem to spew forth from
- a spot high in the sky beginning a few hours after midnight
- on Aug. 12 (about 9 p.m. Eastern daylight time, Aug. 11) and
- lasting from half an hour to an hour. The shower--or storm--will be preceded and followed by scattered shooting stars.
- </p>
- <p> Across the Atlantic, the best viewing spots should be in the
- easternmost regions of the U.S. and Canada, where Perseids are
- expected to peak soon after dark. Stargazers should seek an
- unobstructed view of the northeastern horizon; the meteors'
- radiant point will appear low in the sky, to the left and below
- the easily recognizable irregular W formed by the five bright
- stars of the constellation Cassiopeia. Unfortunately for those
- in the Midwest and West, early-evening skies will still be too
- bright for viewing, although some rear-guard Perseids should
- be visible after dark. And if the Perseids show up early, as
- the University of London astronomers speculate, before dusk
- on the East Coast, no one in North America will see the storm.
- </p>
- <p> Despite the Continent's apparently superior vantage point, Marsden
- says, "I wouldn't make plans to take a special trip to Europe
- to see the meteors." While the 1992 Perseid showers, visible
- over Europe, occurred precisely at the predicted time, he notes,
- the 1991 Perseids, seen in Japan, were inexplicably almost three
- hours late. Should the meteors be that tardy this year, they
- would find Europe in daylight but could make a spectacle of
- themselves in the night skies across the entire U.S. and Canada.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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