Montreal Gazette

GET SET FOR A SHOWER OF SHOOTING STARS

- ANDREW FAZEKAS For more stargazing news, visit me at www.facebook.com/thenightsk­yguy.

Skywatcher­s should get set for the best meteor shower of the year coming in August. The Perseids — the cosmic Old Faithful — is offering up a flurry of shooting stars across the late night skies. The shower’s peak performanc­e is in the hours before dawn Aug. 13 but a trickle of meteors can be seen days before and after, even after nightfall.

Because the peak occurs on a moonless night this year, as many as 30 shooting stars may be visible from dark locations around the West Island region and up to 90 from the dark countrysid­e.

The meteor shower is caused by Earth slamming into a giant cloud of debris left behind by a passing comet. When sand-sized particles hit the atmosphere at speeds of 200,000 km/ h they burn up and create streaks of light in the upper atmosphere.

Look carefully and you will notice they all appear to radiate out from one spot in the sky — the shower’s namesake constellat­ion, Perseus, the mythologic­al hero. To catch the fireworks show it’s best to find a location with no direct lights and with a clear view of the overhead sky. No need for telescopes or binoculars — the unaided eye is best since the meteors will appear to zip across most of the sky.

Also making an appearance in the starry skies in August evening skies are the planets Venus in the low west, while Mars and Saturn are high in the south after darkness falls.

About a half-hour after sunset on Aug. 14 look for a thin waxing crescent moon joined by the super-bright evening star — the neighbouri­ng planet Venus as both set in the west. On the night of Aug. 20 look for the waxing gibbous moon just to the upper right of golden Saturn, sitting in the constellat­ion Sagittariu­s. Then on the evenings of Aug. 22 and 23 look for a waxing moon above the brilliant orange Mars high in the southern late-night sky.

The Royal Astronomic­al Society of Canada will be holding a public Perseids viewing party at the Morgan Arboretum in SteAnne-de-Bellevue on Saturday, Aug. 11, starting at 7:30 p.m. with a talk followed by observatio­ns of the meteor shower.

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