Two meteor showers will peak simultaneously in the early morning hours of Wednesday. The Southern Delta Aquariid and Alpha Capricornid showers will be visible without significant interference from a waxing quarter moon. Thaddeus LaCoursiere, planetarium program coordinator at the Bell Museum in St. Paul, Minnesota, noted that each shower could produce up to a dozen meteors per hour under dark skies, adding up to a significant display. The best time to view the celestial event is during the pre-dawn hours when the moon is low in the sky. No special equipment is needed, just looking for “flashes of light in the night sky,” as LaCoursiere described these “very nice classic meteor showers.” The next major meteor shower, the Perseids, will peak in mid-August. (Newser)
Two Meteor Showers To Coincide For Spectacular Display

Rubio sees US action in Iran completed in weeks as airstrikes rumble on
39m ago
Thailand will have new government next week, PM says
51m ago
Israeli military says it identified a launch of a missile from Yemen
1h ago
US House passes temporary funding bill to end Homeland Security shutdown
1h ago
US judge orders Nexstar to hold Tegna separate pending review
1h ago
Nepal's ex-PM Oli arrested over deaths during Gen Z protests
3h ago






