Community Corner

Quadrantid Meteors: LI Weather For 2024’s 1st Shooting Star Show

The first shooting star show of 2024, the Quadrantids, could treat sky gazers to up to 120 meteors an hour — weather permitting.

LONG ISLAND, NY — The first shooting star show of 2024, the Quadrantids, could treat sky gazers to up to 120 meteors an hour during this week’s short peak, weather conditions permitting on Long Island.

The Quadrantid meteor shower peak is so brief — only six hours — and can occur in daylight hours. This year, the shower peaks at 7:53 a.m. Eastern Time on Thursday. For the best chances to see shooting stars, find a dark sky and start watching around 4:53 a.m.

But Long Island residents might not have much of a chance to view the meteor shower: The National Weather Service forecast for Long Island calls for cloudy skies around that time, beginning at 2 a.m. until sunrise. The skies are not expected to clear until about mid-morning, unless that break in the clouds comes earlier, the NWS said.

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With their high rates and potential for bright fireballs, the Quadrantids are worth getting outside to see, despite a short window of time to see them — that’s because they come from a thin debris stream the Earth crosses at a perpendicular angle, according to NASA. Fireballs are larger explosions of light and color that can persist longer than the average meteor streak.

The Quadrantids “have the potential to be the strongest shower of the year,” according to the American Meteor Society, but because of the short peak and often poor weather conditions in January, it’s sometimes overlooked. Even during poor weather conditions, about 25 shooting stars an hour may be visible under dark skies.

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The moon will be about half full at the shower’s peak, but the American Meteor Society suggests “blocking the moon with a tree or building and viewing toward the northern half of the sky.”

The Quadrantids offer the last chance to see a shooting star show until the Lyrid meteor shower, which peaks April 22-23.

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