Chattanooga Times Free Press

PERSEIDS PEAKING

METEOR SHOWER WILL BRIGHTEN SKIES, BUT MOON AND CLOUDS MAY DIM THE SHOW

- BY LISA DENTON STAFF WRITER

Heads up, amateur astronomer­s. Earth is moving through the path of Comet Swift-Tuttle for a couple more weeks and the Perseid meteor shower is peaking Monday night.

If you’ve seen this spectacle before, you know the proper response is “Wowza!” — as long as the moon and the weather cooperate.

A favorite for its warm weather/vacation timing and sheer volume of “shooting

stars,” the Perseid meteor shower is one of the brightest of the year and can deliver at least one meteor per minute, sometimes in long, dramatic streaks across the sky.

But this year may be problemati­c. Early forecasts were calling for cloudy skies Monday night. And the moon is in a waxing gibbous phase that will have it 94% illuminate­d. Not quite full, but bright enough to dim the show for all but the brightest Perseids.

It’s that kind of uncertaint­y that frustrates Jack Pitkin, operations manager of UTC’s Clarence T. Jones Observator­y.

“To be honest, meteor showers and I usually don’t get along,” he says. “When I am in the right place for one, the weather is wrong. When the weather is right, I am in the wrong place.”

Still, he says, “I will probably stick my head out around midnight Monday night and see if I see anything. If nothing else, the full moon is beautiful, and I can remember we went there … half a century ago.”

Pitkin says no special equipment is necessary to view the meteor shower.

“Just pull up a comfortabl­e chair and watch the show,” he says. “If you can get out to a place with clear, dark skies, that will help.”

Rob Simmons, a Chattanoog­a Police Department robbery investigat­or, says he expects to be looking skyward Monday night as well. In his downtime, Simmons has developed an interest in astrophoto­graphy, capturing several stellar images of the moon and planets this summer.

The hobby combines his dual interests in astronomy and photograph­y. Simmons was a wedding photograph­er before he joined the CPD, but says police work is “less stressful.”

“I’m more afraid of a bride than a criminal,” he jokes.

His interest in astronomy was piqued when he was about 10 years old and his father woke him one night to see a meteor shower. It was the mid-1980s, he says, and the family was living in Florida. He remembers the celestial display was more “meteor storm” than meteor shower.

“You could see a meteor every second,” he says. “It looked like Armageddon.”

In his 20s, he actually built a telescope out of wood and mirrors.

“The first thing I saw was Saturn with its rings,” he remembers. “I was hooked after that.”

Now that he’s older “and more secure in my employment,” he says, “I can afford nicer equipment that I don’t have to build myself.”

His latest acquisitio­n is an automated telescope that can locate the planets for him. “You say, ‘Go to Jupiter’ and push a button,” he says.

He has a dedicated camera that fits in the eyepiece of the telescope to take photos, but he says the latest smartphone­s can produce similar results for budding hobbyists.

“Nowadays, the cameras in phones are phenomenal,” he says. “For 30 bucks, you can buy a little adapter, hook it to the telescope eyepiece, download an app that’s geared toward photograph­ing the planets and start snapping pictures.”

Photograph­ing meteor showers is not as easy as honing in on the moon or a planet since there’s no way to predict exactly where the meteors will fall. However, a camera with a wide-angle lens will show more sky and increase your chances of catching a shooting star on film.

Simmons says he’ll be happy just to see the show.

“Sometimes it’s difficult to watch because the best time for most meteor showers is usually after midnight or predawn, right before the sun rises,” he says. “I’m old now [43], and I don’t want to get up that early.”

 ?? FILE PHOTO BY ARKANSAS DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE/STEPHEN B. THORNTON ?? Space debris from the tail of Comet Swift-Tuttle strikes the atmosphere five miles west of Benton, Arkansas.
FILE PHOTO BY ARKANSAS DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE/STEPHEN B. THORNTON Space debris from the tail of Comet Swift-Tuttle strikes the atmosphere five miles west of Benton, Arkansas.
 ?? AP FILE PHOTO/ERIC SCHULTZ ?? A meteor is seen over a railroad crossing at Ditto Marina Parkway in Huntsville, Alabama.
AP FILE PHOTO/ERIC SCHULTZ A meteor is seen over a railroad crossing at Ditto Marina Parkway in Huntsville, Alabama.

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