2017 Perseid Meteor Shower Viewing Guide

The peak of the 2017 Perseid Meteor shower is here! Friday night will feature the most meteors, but Saturday night will have a significant amount of meteor activity as well!
This shower is routinely one of the best and most popular meteor showers of the year. It produces a lot of meteors every single year! Activity will drop off a bit this year compared to 2016. This is mainly due to the bright moon that will be in the sky most of the night.

Normally the best time to view the Perseid meteor shower is after midnight when meteor rates are the highest. However, this year, I am recommending people start looking right after it gets dark. The moon rises around 10 p.m. local time Friday night and 11 p.m. Saturday night.
Now, don't give up on viewing after midnight. You will still be able to see a lot of meteors, but the faint meteors will be washed out by moonlight.

This shower is well known for very bright and long-lasting meteors that will be visible despite moonlight. Just do not look at the moon, try to face a part of the sky away from the moon. However, still get as much sky as possible in your view as the meteors will streak in all corners of the sky.
As with any meteor shower. You need patience. Plan on making an evening out of it. Stay outside for at least one hour, preferable two at the minimum. Do not look at any light source, like a phone or bright fire (though a nice campfire will not destroy your night vision like a phone or tablet screen will).

A slow-moving front is expected to bring widespread clouds to the Eastern Seaboard. These areas will have better viewing conditions Saturday night. Don't give up hope if you are in the "poor" area. I was in the poor area last year and happened to have two hours of mostly clear skies, and I witnessed nearly 80 meteors over the course of two hours.
Latest U.S. Satellite Imagery
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Alaska and Hawaii Viewing

This shower is visible across the Northern Hemisphere. Here are more sky cover outlooks.

Conditions look much better across the rest of Europe tonight.

Snap shot of forecast cloud cover around Midnight local time.
Mideast and Asia tonight

Across Asia, the best night for viewing may actually be Saturday night local time.
Comet Swift-Tuttle Sparks Perseids The source of the meteors is debris left by a passage of a comet. Every year, the Earth travels through the debris field of the comet named Swift-Tuttle.
The comet orbits the sun every 133 years. It has a very unusual orbit. It comes into the inner solar system, only to reach past the orbit of Pluto. It passed closest to the sun back in 1992. There has been some concern that the comet will pass close enough to pose a threat to Earth.
The nucleus is 16 miles across, more than double the size of the object that may have been responsible for extinction of the dinosaurs. It is the largest object to approach so close to Earth on a regular basis.
In a 1997 paper written by Gerrit L. Verschuur, comet Swift-Tuttle has been described as "the single most dangerous object known to humanity." The good news is that it will not pass near Earth until 2126.
Thanks for reading. Just look up; you never know what you will see!
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