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Unexpected Perseid Meteor Outburst on 14 August 2021

22 pointsby nabilhatover 3 years ago

2 comments

criticaltinkerover 3 years ago
<i>&gt; The Perseid Filament is a ribbon of dust inside the broader Perseid debris zone. Comet 109P&#x2F;Swift-Tuttle supplies the raw material. The comet loops around the sun every 133 years, shedding dust as it goes. Over time, much of Swift-Tuttle’s dust is perturbed by the gravity of Jupiter, helping scatter it into the diffuse cloud that we experience every year as the Perseid meteor shower. But there is a part of the comet’s orbit in a “mean motion resonance” with Jupiter where dust can accumulate instead of dispersing. This is the Perseid Filament. </i><p><i>&gt; Forecasters still can’t predict when the Perseid Filament will return. It came for many years in a row around 1993, and it may have grazed Earth again, slightly, in 2018, 2019 and 2020. No one predicted a direct hit in 2021. </i><p>I find it amazing that over 4 decades ago humanity launched Voyager 1 on a trajectory that led it out of the solar system - yet today we&#x27;re being startled by unforeseen and intense meteor showers from our own planetary neighborhood. Don&#x27;t get me wrong, the small scale of these objects and the complex dynamics governing their motion does seem like a hard problem to solve. But the whole situation leaves me with a feeling of awe - both for what we have achieved and what we have yet to understand.
20after4over 3 years ago
I saw a really brilliant meteor while driving on the night of the 15th over southwest MO. It was as bright as a medium-sized firework explosion, green in color, and much larger than a streak. More of a shower of sparks than a shooting star. I wish I&#x27;d thought to be out observing the sky on the 14th.