Thursday, August 12, 2010

NASA TV Online -Watch Live Meteor Shower | Perseid Meteor Shower Live Watch Online NASA TV | August 12,2010 Meteor Perseid Shower Live Streaming Free Online NASA TV |

NASA TV Online -Watch Live Meteor Shower | Perseid Meteor Shower Live Watch Online NASA TV | August 12,2010 Meteor Perseid Shower Live Streaming Free Online NASA TV |


Photographer, Location Images Comments



Peter McCabe,
Dundalk, Co. Louth, Ireland
Aug. 7, 2009
#1 I set up my camera last night hoping to get a few Perseids. This one shot across the sky behind my back. I didn't see it, but the camera did!
Photo details: Canon 450D, 20mm wide angle lens, 25 seconds





Bill Cooke,
NASA Meteoroid Environment Office, Huntsville, Alabama
Aug. 4, 2009
#1, #2, #3 Using a pair of all-sky cameras, NASA astronomer Bill Cooke photographed this Perseid skimming the top of Earth's atmosphere on August 4th. Because the Earthgrazer was captured on two cameras 100 miles apart, he was able to triangulate its position and measure its velocity. "It came in at 58.8 km/s and disintegrated between 111 and 86 km above Earth's surface," he says. So far, the dual-camera system has captured seven bright Perseids suitable for analysis. Cooke's histograms of starting and ending heights answer the question, how high is a Perseid?



[movie+sounds]

Thomas Ashcraft ,
near Santa Fe, New Mexico
Aug. 4, 2009
#1, #2, more On August 4th, amateur astronomer Thomas Ashcraft caught an early Perseid using an all-sky camera at his observatory near Santa Fe, New Mexico. Click here play a movie with sound effects. The "ping" you just heard was a 61.25 MHz TV signal bouncing off the meteor's ionized tail. Ashcraft keeps an antenna trained on the sky so that he can record the echos and lay them down as soundtracks for his all-sky movies.



Brian Emfinger,
Ozark, Arkansas, US
Aug. 1, 2009
#1, #2, #3, more The Perseids continue to slowly increase. I caught 4 meteors with two nice ones. This fireball was battling fading sunlight and the moon yet still is easily visible! The second one is from early morning and has very nice color and clearly shows the Perseid Radiant.
Photo details: Canon Digital Rebel XT, ISO 1600, F3.5, 30secs



Brian Emfinger,
Ozark, Arkansas, USA
Jul. 26, 2009
#1, #2, more I caught this bright Perseid Fireball with smoke trail just after midnight on Sunday July 26th.
Photo details: Canon Digital Rebel XT, ISO 1600, F3.5, 1 min exposure.

2001 News Releases NASA Leonids Activities: Sleepheads May Miss Spectacular Celestial Display
November 14, 2001


Leonid meteor shower above Earth, 1997
Leonid meteor shower, 2000
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       Early birds may catch more than their proverbial worms this week. In the predawn hours of Sunday, Nov.18, the annual Leonid meteor shower may put on one of its best shows in decades, according to various scientists modeling the expected Leonid activity this year.
       "It's time to set your alarm clocks and get yourself out under a dark sky," said Dr. Donald Yeomans, head of NASA's Near Earth Object program office, at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. "This could be the last opportunity for watching an impressive meteor storm in a dark sky for decades to come."
       Yeomans explains what the Leonids are and how to see them, in a video on the JPL Web site at: http://www.jpl.nasa.gov .
       Meteors, also called shooting stars, are really streaks of light that flash across the sky as bits of dust and rock in space collide with Earth's upper atmosphere and vaporize. The Leonid shower appears every year around Nov. 17 or 18 as the Earth intersects the orbit of comet Tempel-Tuttle and runs into streams of dust shed by the comet. Best viewing times this year are predicted to be the early morning hours of November 18, with the peak activity expected around 2 a.m. PST (5 a.m. EST).
       They are called Leonid meteors for the direction in the sky from which they appear to originate -- the constellation Leo. Because the stream of comet dust hits Earth almost head-on, the Leonids are among the fastest meteors around -- they zip silently across the sky at nearly 70 kilometers per second (44 miles per second). Every so often, Earth passes through an especially dense clump of dust from Tempel-Tuttle, and a truly spectacular meteor storm occurs -- the great Leonid storm of 1966 produced 150,000 meteors per hour.
       Four NASA centers - JPL; Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala.; Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.; and the Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif. -- have activities scheduled around this year's meteor shower.
       At Marshall, researchers will use special cameras to scan the skies and report meteor activity around the clock Nov. 17 and 18. From six key points on the globe, they will record and transmit their observations to Marshall's Leonid Environment Operations Center, a data clearinghouse that will provide meteor updates in near real-time through http://www.SpaceWeather.com -- a Web site sponsored by science@nasa.gov.
       "We're collecting this data to analyze and refine our meteor-forecasting techniques," said Dr. Rob Suggs, the Leonid Environment Operations Center team leader. "If we can better determine where, when and how the meteors will strike, we can take protective measures to prevent or minimize damage to our spacecraft."
       The researchers, along with colleagues from the University of Western Ontario in Canada and the U.S. Air Force, will monitor the storm from six locations, Huntsville, Ala.; Eglin Air Force Base, Fla.; Maui, Hawaii; Sunspot, N.M.; the U.S. Territory of Guam; and the Gobi Dessert in Mongolia. Each location was selected based on meteor forecasts and the area's climate.
       The monitoring team also has the capability to detect meteors the casual observer may miss. Using special image-intensified cameras that can detect faint objects even in low-light conditions, the researchers will monitor the shower, using the video screens as windows to the skies. Every hour, the teams will relay their observations to the Marshall control center, helping to paint a comprehensive picture of the meteor storm.
       Most Leonid particles are the size of dust grains, and will vaporize very high in the atmosphere, so they present no threat to people on the ground or even in airplanes. However, there is a slight chance that a satellite could be damaged if it were hit by a Leonid meteor. The meteors are too small to simply blow up a satellite. However, the Leonids are moving so fast they vaporize on impact, forming a cloud of electrified gas called plasma. Since plasma can carry an electric current, there is a risk that a Leonid-generated plasma cloud could cause a short circuit in a satellite, damaging sensitive electronic components.
       Goddard Space Flight Center is responsible for controlling many satellites for NASA and other organizations and is taking precautions to mitigate the risk posed by the Leonids. These include pointing instrument apertures away from the direction of the Leonid stream, closing the doors on instruments where possible, turning down high voltages on systems to prevent the risk of a short circuit, and positioning satellites to minimize the cross-section exposed to the Leonids.
       Goddard controls or manages 21 satellites in the earth and space sciences. It also manages NASA's Tracking and Data Relay Satellite System constellation, which is controlled from White Sands, N.M.
       At Ames, meteor experts Dr. David Morrison, chief scientist at NASA's Astrobiology Institute, and Dr. Scott Sanford, a NASA planetary scientist, will be available Friday, Nov. 16, at Ames for media interviews about the Leonid meteor storm. The scientists will discuss NASA's airborne mission to study the Leonids, the danger the meteors could pose to satellites, recent Leonid prediction models and the latest research, which suggests that meteors may have played a role in the origin of life.
       On Nov. 18, a team of 19 astrobiologists from five countries will depart from southern California's Edwards Air Force Base on an NKC-135 research aircraft to keep an eye on the sky for satellite operators and to study the processes that may have jump-started life on Earth. The 418th Flight Test Squadron at Edwards Air Force Base operates the research aircraft, which flew previous Leonid Multi-instrument Airborne Campaign missions in 1998 and 1999 over Japan and Europe.
       Many scientists think meteors might have showered the Earth with the molecules necessary for life's origin. "We are eager to get another chance to find clues to the puzzling question of 'What happens to the organic matter brought in by the meteoroids?'" said Dr. Michael Meyer, lead scientist for astrobiology at NASA Headquarters, Washington, D.C. which is sponsoring the airborne observing mission.
       Astrobiology is the study of the origin, evolution, distribution and future of life in the universe. Ames is NASA's lead center for astrobiology and the location of the central offices of the NASA Astrobiology Institute, an international research consortium.
       Information about the Leonid Multi-instrument Airborne Campaign and live Leonid coverage are available at: http://leonid.arc.nasa.gov/ or http://www-space.arc.nasa.gov/~leonid/ .
       Observers can calculate local meteor rates using their home computers via: http://www.space.arc.nasa.gov/~leonid/fluxestimator.html .
       NASA TV will broadcast live commentary and video of the Leonids from 9:30 a.m. to 3 a.m. PST (12:30 a.m. to 6 a.m. EST) Sunday, Nov. 18. The broadcast, originating from Marshall, will feature live video of the Leonids meteor shower provided by a video camera with enhanced images and animation. If weather and cloud cover inhibit observation, the broadcast will be cancelled and regular programming resumed.
       JPL is managed for NASA's Office of Space Science, Washington, D.C., by the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena.
NOTE TO EDITORS: More information on Leonids activities at specific NASA Centers is available from: Martha Heil, JPL, at: 818/354-0850; Steve Roy, Marshall Space Flight Center, at: 256/544-6535; Bill Steigerwald, Goddard Space Flight Center, at: 301/286-5017; Kathleen Burton, Ames Research Center, at: 650/604-1731;.

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