Community Corner
Orionid Meteor Shower Peaks Over California
The Orionid Meteor Shower is known for fireballs and persistent trains. Report your sighting to the American Meteor Society.
CALIFORNIA — If you see a streak across the California sky late Thursday or early Friday — a meteorite, meteor, falling star, shooting star or comet —by any other name you are seeing the Orionid meteor shower is at its peak.
The thin, crescent moon will leave mostly dark skies for the peak, when about 20 shooting stars an hour fly in typical years. The meteors are fast-moving and occasionally produce bright fireballs and leave persistent trains.
So-named because meteors radiate from the same area of the sky as the Orion constellation, the Orionids are produced by debris from the famous Halley’s Comet.
Find out what's happening in Berkeleyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
The hours between midnight and dawn are the best time to see the Orionids. Take along a camera. Report a fireball — a very bright meteor — to the American Meteor Society.
The Orionid meteor shower, which continues through Nov. 7, intersects with the long-running Taurid meteor shower that rambles along through late summer and most of the fall. The Taurids are actually two separate meteor showers coming from two separate streams — the first created by grain dust left behind by Asteroid 2004/TG10, and the second by debris left behind by Comet 2P/Encke. It runs through Dec. 10.
Find out what's happening in Berkeleyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
The best times to see Taurids are late October and early November, when the two streams overlap. The South Taurids peak around Nov. 5; the North Taurids peak around Nov. 12.
Occasionally, the Taurids create a “swarm” with numerous bright fireballs. The last one was in 2015. In normal years, though, they produce about five or 10 shooting stars an hour. Like most meteor showers, this is best viewed after midnight.
- You may also like: Aurora Borealis Displays More Likely In Active Solar Storm Season | Aurora Borealis Hunting: What’s A Kp Index, More Northern Lights Tips
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.