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  • 6
    Jan
    2012
    8:58pm, EST

    Meteor quest turns up treasures

    (c) Jeff Berkes Photography

    This photo combines the landscape of the Florida Keys with the flash of a meteor above on the night of Jan. 3-4, at the peak of the Quadrantid meteors.

    By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

    Follow @b0yle



    January is the perfect time for a road trip to Florida, and if there's a promising meteor shower to see, so much the better. That's what brought photographer Jeff Berkes down from Pennsylvania to the Florida Keys. The payoff came in the form of a stunning set of pictures showing the Quadrantid meteors at their peak.

    "The Florida Keys sounded really good in January for the Quadrantid meteor shower, but Mother Nature had the cold front follow me all the way south," Berkes wrote in his Flickr photo gallery. "The record low temperature for Key West is 41 degrees. It went down to 46, with winds around 20-30 mph near Big Pine Key this particular night on January 3rd / 4th, 2012."


    Berkes bundled up in two sweatshirts and a fleece, plus "a mad bomber hat" and winter gloves. Then he waited for the light show to begin. He wasn't disappointed.

    One picture shows twisted trees in the Keys, with a meteor flashing in the sky above. "That was captured earlier in the night, while the moon was still up," Berkes told me in an email. "It might even be just a random meteor instead of a Quadrantid meteor."

    Scientists say the Quadrantids are sparked every year on the night of Jan. 3-4, when Earth passes through the trail of cosmic grit left behind by a burnt-out comet now known as asteroid 2003 EH1. These particular meteors appear to emanate from a now-obsolete constellation known as Quadrans Muralis, or the Mural Quadrant. That's why they're known as the Quadrantids.

    This year was a particularly good year for the "Quads," in part because because the moon had set by the time the meteor shower really got going. This year's shower was reported to reach a peak ratae of roughly 80 shooting stars per hour in the wee hours of Jan. 4. Berkes benefited from a bonus: the faint glow of the zodiacal light. You can see it in the picture below:

    (c) Jeff Berkes Photography

    A green light pen was used to add "2012" as a signature to this photo of a meteor and the zodiacal light over the Florida Keys.

    "The triangular column of light you see is the zodiac lights, stretching up into the night sky before dawn," Berkes told me. "Light coming from the sun [while it's] well below the horizon is scattered by 'space dust,' making it visible in dark locations before sunrise and after sunset. It is definitely something I do not see every day."

    Berkes said he counted close to 100 meteors while he was out. He has mastered a technique called "light painting," which calls for adding illumination to a night scene during a long exposure. We featured one of his light-painting photos last fall during the Orionid meteor shower, and you can see the effect in these photo as well.

    "The '2012' in green is just another light-painting trick with a special green pen," he wrote. "The Quadrantids of 2012 were certainly better than 2011. I'm thinking it could be a sign that 2012 will be an even better year than 2011."

    I'm thinking the same... Or at least wishing it will be so.

    Check out Berkes' Flickr photostream or his Web site for additional visual treasures. You'll find more Quadrantid images at the SpaceWeather.com Web site. There could be still more night-sky sights on the way: SpaceWeather.com's Tony Phillips says a coronal mass ejection from the sun "might deliver a glancing blow to Earth's magnetic field" on Saturday, sparking enhanced auroras.

    The next big meteor show is farther out on the schedule: The Lyrids are due to reach their peak on the night of April 22-23. 

    More meteoric marvels:

    • Quadrantid meteor show sparks chills and thrills
    • Astronaut catches a falling star during the Perseids
    • Can you spot the missing meteor in this video?

    Alan Boyle is msnbc.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter or adding Cosmic Log's Google+ page to your circle. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for other worlds.

    49 comments

    I saw a falling star once, so I made a wish, then I looked beside me only to be dismayed at the realization there was no big bag of money there, that wishing upon a star crap doesn't work. I'm sticking to Rainbows and Leprechauns

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  • 4
    Jan
    2012
    8:21pm, EST

    Meteor show sparks chills and thrills

    NBC's Brian Williams reports on the dazzling Quadrantid meteor shower.

    By Tariq Malik
    Managing editor, Space.com

    A dazzling display of "shooting stars" kicked off the 2012 skywatching season early Wednesday, thrilling amateur astronomers around the world with views of the Quadrantid meteor shower.

    Usually one of the most dependable meteor displays of the year, the Quadrantid meteor shower peaked at about 2:30 a.m. ET in a brief but eye-catching light show. Quadrantid meteors are the leftover crumbs of a shattered comet that broke apart centuries ago, NASA scientists say.

    To mark the meteor shower, Space.com invited readers to send in their photos of the event, and you answered in spades. From light-polluted cities to remote islands, skywatchers reported spotting some dazzling views of Quadrantid meteors.


    Roberto Porto

    This long-exposure photo by Roberto Porto shows the bright arcs of star trails and a bright Quadrantid meteor in the predawn sky over Tenerife in Spain's Canary Islands.

    Veterinary surgeon Roberto Porto photographed the meteor shower from the island of Tenerife in Spain's Canary Islands. The view, he said, was stupendous. [Amazing 2012 Quadrantid Meteor Shower Photos]

    On Tenerife, the Quadrantids display peaked close to sunrise (local time), "so the peak was [awash in] twilight," Porto told Space.com in an email. "Also, the weather predictions were for high clouds this night, [but] we managed to capture a couple of genuine meteors."

    Tenerife is a volcanic island and home to Tiede, the highest mountain in Spain. Porto's photos show Quadrantid meteors streaking over Tiede and other peaks, with dark rock formations setting the scene.

    Roberto Porto

    A Quadrantid meteor is seen streaking across a cloud-spattered sky with shadowy rocks in the foreground in this dazzling photo by astrophotographer Roberto Porto taken on Jan. 4, 2012 on Tenerife Island in Spain's Canary Islands during the meteor shower's peak.

    According to the skywatching website Spaceweather.com and the International Meteor Organization, this year's Quadrantid display peaked at about 80 meteors an hour.

    This reporter spotted three meteors within a 20-minute period of observing from West Orange, N.J., before the frigid winter night forced a retreat back inside. In Florida, skywatcher Richard Hay was more resilient.

    Richard Hay

    Richard Hay sent this image of a Quadrantid meteor from Florida.

    "My wife and I ventured out into the frigid 26-degree Florida night this morning to catch the shower with our own eyes and were rewarded with about 20 or so bright Quadrantids over a 90-minute period," Hay wrote in a blog post.

    In Ozark, Ark., skywatcher Brian Emfinger reported seeing several meteors that — while not especially bright — were still impressive.

    "I caught one nice Quadrantid Earthgrazer that shot across much of the sky, but it wasn't super-bright," Emfinger told Space.com in an email. "It did leave a trail that was visible for about 15 minutes." Earthgrazers are meteors that occur low on the horizon, and can sometimes light up in dazzling fireball displays.

    Jonathan Simons

    Astrophotographer Jonathan Simons took this photograph of a Quadrantid meteor in Hudson, N.Y., on Jan. 4, 2012, at 4:30 a.m. local time.

    Unlike some of the more well-known annual meteor showers, such as the Perseid and Geminid displays late in the year, the Quadrantid meteor shower's peak lasts only a few hours. The Quadrantids and Geminids originate from the asteroid 2003 EH1, which astronomers suspect was once part of a larger comet that broke into pieces several hundred years ago.

    The small space rocks that become Quadrantid meteors hit the atmosphere at speeds of about 90,000 mph and burn up about 50 miles above the Earth, creating dazzling fireballs.

    The Quadrantid meteor shower is named for the constellation Quadrans Muralis (or Mural Quadrant, which was an early astronomy tool for observing stars), a pattern first observed in 1795 by the French astronomer Jerome Lalande. Quadrans Muralis is located between the better-known constellations of Bootes the Hersdman and Draco the Dragon.


    If you snapped an amazing photo the Quadrantid meteor shower or any other skywatching sight and would like to share it with Space.com, contact managing editor Tariq Malik at  tmalik@space.com.

    You can follow Tariq Malik on Twitter  @tariqjmalik. Follow SPACE.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter  @Spacedotcom  and on  Facebook.

    • Skywatcher Photos: Dazzling Views of Venus & the Moon
    • 2012 Meteor Shower Skywatching Calendar
    • Planets Venus and Jupiter Own the Night (Infographic)

    Copyright 2012 TechMediaNetwork.com. More from Space.com.

    5 comments

    So how dangerous is this to our space flyers and sats up there? and I know that we got some samples from a comet that we had to go fly to and took a long time to complet the mission, but have we tried to get samples from any of these annual metor showers?

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