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  2. List of meteor showers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_meteor_showers

    This list of meteor streams and peak activity times is based on data from the International Meteor Organization while most of the parent body associations are from Gary W. Kronk book, Meteor Showers: A Descriptive Catalog, Enslow Publishers, New Jersey, ISBN 0-89490-071-4, and from Peter Jenniskens's book, "Meteor Showers and Their Parent ...

  3. Video captures stunning view of fireball blazing through ...

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    A sky camera from a National Weather Service forecaster in Pittsburgh captured the meteor darting across the city skyline around 7:30 p. Video captures stunning view of fireball blazing through ...

  4. How to watch the Lyrid meteor shower in Central Indiana - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/watch-lyrid-meteor-shower...

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  5. There was a meteor shower that could be seen from Akron last ...

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  6. Cameras for All-Sky Meteor Surveillance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cameras_for_All-Sky_Meteor...

    CAMS [3] networks around the world use an array of low-light video surveillance cameras to collect astrometric tracks and brightness profiles of meteors in the night sky. . Triangulation of those tracks results in the meteor's direction and speed, from which the meteors’ orbit in space is calculated and the material's parent body can be identifi

  7. Geminids - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geminids

    The Geminids are a prolific meteor shower with 3200 Phaethon (which is thought to be an Apollo asteroid [4] with a "rock comet" orbit. [5]) being the parent body. [6]Because of this, it would make this shower, along with the Quadrantids, the only major meteor showers not originating from a comet.

  8. How to watch the Orionid meteor shower, debris from Halley’s ...

    www.aol.com/watch-orionid-meteor-shower-debris...

    The annual Orionid meteor shower is set to peak Sunday night into Monday at a rate of 10 to 20 meteors per hour. Here’s how to see the spectacle in the night sky.

  9. Quadrantids - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quadrantids

    The Quadrantids (QUA) are a meteor shower that peaks in early January and whose radiant lies in the constellation Boötes.The zenithal hourly rate (ZHR) of this shower can be as high as that of two other reliably rich meteor showers, the Perseids in August and the Geminids in December, [4] yet Quadrantid meteors are not seen as often as those of the two other showers because the time frame of ...