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The eta Aquariid meteor shower, which is produced by the debris from Halley’s Comet, will peak
on May 6, 08h UT, which is sadly after sunrise on May 6 (late afternoon).Â
Despite this, we will have worthwhile rates on the weekend mornings of May 7, May 8 and May 9, from 3:00 AM to 5:00 AM local time Australia-wide, where people with dark skies should see a meteor around every three minutes.Â
While the peak is on the morning of the 6th during daylight, the peak is really broad and viewing from the 7-9 will give you
decent rates (see table below). Based on the NASA meteor flux program
(see below) and my own excel spreadsheet using Jennisken’s eta
Aquariid stream parameters the
best rates will be seen from Australia on the mornings of the 8th and 9th (see table below, but the 7th is very worthwhile too, even the 10th if the other nights are clouded out, as you can see the
rate difference between the nights is fairly marginal).
The first Quarter Moon sets before the radiant rises, so we will have a good view this year.
People in the suburbs
should see a meteor around once every 4-5 minutes,
and in the country about once every 3 minutes. The radiant of the
shower is about five hand-spans up from the eastern horizon, and three
hand-spans to the left of due east at 4 am (see spotter chart at 5:00 am
above). The radiant is close to Mars, which makes a good reference point.
Weather prediction looks good with clear mornings for most of Australia (except the bit where I live)
You may have read that this year the eta Aquariids have a predicted ZHR of 50 meteors. The figure ZHR is zenithal hourly rate. This is the number of meteors
that a single observer would see per hour if the shower’s “point of
origin”, or radiant, were at the zenith and the sky was dark enough
for 6.5-magnitude
stars to be visible to the naked eye.
In practice, you will never see this many meteors as the radiant will be some distance below the zenith.
Also, unless you are out deep in the countryside, the darkness will be less than ideal. How many are you likely to see in reality?Â
The table below gives predictions
below for various towns, but they are only predictions and while based on average steam density there may be some differences year to year, but good rates
were
seen in previous years, and dark sky sites may possibly see one meteor every 3-4
minutes or so. There were many bright ones reported with persistent trains in 2014. People in the suburbs maybe will see less,
but at least one every 6 minutes should be possible.Â
Predicted meteor rates for selected towns (taken from NASA shower Flux estimator below). If your city is not on the list you can expect a meteor rate similar to the closest city to you in latitude.
Town | Morning May 7 | Morning May 8 | Morning May 9 |
Adelaide | 17 meteors/hr | 20 meteors/hr | 17 meteors/hr |
Brisbane | 18 meteors/hr | 22 meteors/hr | 18 meteors/hr |
Darwin | 19 meteors/hr | 22 meteors/hr | 19 meteors/hr |
Perth | 18 meteors/hr | 20 meteors/hr | 17 meteors/hr |
Melbourne | 17 meteors/hr | 20 meteors/hr | 16 meteors/hr |
Hobart | 16 meteors/hr | 18 meteors/hr | 15 meteors/hr |
Sydney | 17 meteors/hr | 20 meteors/hr | 17 meteors/hr |
The
radiant of the shower is about five hand-spans up from the eastern
horizon and three hand-spans to the left of due east at 4 am (see above
for a spotter chart at 5 am). When looking, be sure to let your eyes
adjust for at least
5 minutes so your eyes can be properly adapted to the dark.
Don’t look
directly at the radiant site, because the meteors will often start
their “burn” some distance from it, but around a hand-span up or to the
side. The best way to watch the Eta Aquariids is to let your eye rove around
the entire patch of the sky above the north-east horizon, between the
only two obvious bright stars in the northeast, Altair and Fomalhaut, and Mars as the center of your field (again, see the spotter chart at 5:00 am
above).
Be patient, although you should see an average of
a meteor every 3 to 4 minutes, a whole stretch of time can go by
without a meteor, then a whole bunch turn up one after the other.
Make
yourself comfortable, choose an observing site that has little to
obstruct the eastern horizon, have a comfortable chair to sit in (a
banana lounger is best), or blankets and pillows. Rug up against the
cold. A hot Thermos of something to drink and plenty of mosquito
protection will complete your observing preparations. As well as
meteors, keep an eye out for satellites (see Heavens Above
for predictions from your site). The Milky way will arch above you,
with Mars just next to the radiant and Jupiter and Venus below.
Use the NASAÂ meteor shower flux estimator for
an estimate of what the shower will be like from your location (you
may need to enter your longitude and latitude, surprisingly, while
Adelaide and Brisbane are hard-wired in, Sydney and Melbourne are not).
See the image to the left for typical output. The peak is rather sharp.
Unfortunately, both Chrome and Firefox have changed their security
settings to prevent plugins from running, and the flux estimator only
runs under Internet Explorer now.
You
need to choose 31 Eta Aquariids and remember to set the date to 7-8 or
8-9 May 2022 and turn off daylight saving time. You can follow the progress of the shower at the IMO live Aquariid site.
Guides for taking meteor photos are here and here.
Cloud cover predictions can be found at SkippySky.
Here is the near-real time satellite view of the clouds (day and night) http://satview.bom.gov.au/
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