Community Corner

Don't Miss the Final Days of the Orionid Meteor Shower Above Redwood City, Woodside

The shower began on Oct. 2.


Skywatchers can still glimpse a celestial show this week as the Orionid meteor shower winds down.

The Orionid shower actually began Oct. 2 and will continue through Nov. 7, according to officials at the Griffith Observatory.

Find out what's happening in Redwood City-Woodsidefor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The best viewing times will be after “moonset” at around 12:30 a.m., continuing until dawn at just before 6 a.m.

At its peak, skygazers could see as many as 20 meteors per hour as they stream out of their “radiant point” in the club of the constellation Orion the Hunter.

Find out what's happening in Redwood City-Woodsidefor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The Orionids are considered among the more popular meteors, since they are actually particles shed by the galaxy’s best-known comet -- Halley’s Comet. The particles can be seen streaking across the sky as they hit our planet’s atmosphere at about 41 miles per second.

For people who can’t stay awake this week, another meteor shower -- the Leonids -- is scheduled to begin Nov. 6. That shower will continue until Nov. 30. Those meteors, which are particles from the Tempel-Tuttle Comet, will also be best seen between midnight and dawn, with the best viewing nights expected to be Nov. 18-19.

As the name suggests, the meteors will be seen emanating from the “sickle” of the Leo the Lion constellation. About 12 meteors per hour can be expected during the Leonid shower.

--City News Service; Image via NASA

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