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Meteor shower -- meh or yeah?

Luke Skywalker

Super Moderator
{vb:raw ozzmodz_postquote}:
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Cat Connor says there were dozens of photographers camped out on Mono Lake in California, hoping to see the meteor shower. " border="0" height="360" id="articleGalleryPhoto001" width="640"/>Many are grumbling that the Camelopardalids meteor shower was a dud, but some photographers had a chance to see burning fireballs streaking the night sky. iReporter Cat Connor says there were dozens of photographers camped out on Mono Lake in California, hoping to see the meteor shower.
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Jean-Francois Gout had only one word to describe the Camelopardalids meteor shower: "Disappointing!" He said he did manage to photograph a few meteors from Lake Monroe in Indiana." border="0" height="360" id="articleGalleryPhoto002" width="640"/>Jean-Francois Gout had only one word to describe the Camelopardalids meteor shower: "Disappointing!" He said he did manage to photograph a few meteors from Lake Monroe in Indiana.
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Tracey Choulat stood outside Pierson, Florida, watching for the Camelopardalids meteor shower. After waiting for three hours, he jokingly renamed it a "meteor sprinkle." " border="0" height="360" id="articleGalleryPhoto003" width="640"/>Tracey Choulat stood outside Pierson, Florida, watching for the Camelopardalids meteor shower. After waiting for three hours, he jokingly renamed it a "meteor sprinkle."
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Ed Baumgarten had his camera running for three hours in Stewardson, Illinois, hoping to catch many images of the meteor shower. He photographed a few streaks in the sky, but says the celestial event didn't live up to the hype." border="0" height="360" id="articleGalleryPhoto004" width="640"/>Ed Baumgarten had his camera running for three hours in Stewardson, Illinois, hoping to catch many images of the meteor shower. He photographed a few streaks in the sky, but says the celestial event didn't live up to the hype.
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Garet Foote was in Big Rapids, Michigan, watching the skies for the much anticipated Camelopardalids meteor shower. He says it was underwhelming, but he's looking forward to photographing upcoming meteor showers in the future." border="0" height="360" id="articleGalleryPhoto005" width="640"/>Garet Foote was in Big Rapids, Michigan, watching the skies for the much anticipated Camelopardalids meteor shower. He says it was underwhelming, but he's looking forward to photographing upcoming meteor showers in the future.
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Jason Walle was photographing the meteor shower in Cashiers, North Carolina, and says it was a bust in terms of the number of sightings. "Despite that, it was pretty amazing to see it since it was the first shower for this comet," he said. " border="0" height="360" id="articleGalleryPhoto006" width="640"/>Jason Walle was photographing the meteor shower in Cashiers, North Carolina, and says it was a bust in terms of the number of sightings. "Despite that, it was pretty amazing to see it since it was the first shower for this comet," he said.
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Barry Shupp was hoping to get photos of the meteor shower from Hustontown, Pennsylvania. Instead, he had a chance to photograph the International Space Station while also catching a meteor passing by overhead. " border="0" height="360" id="articleGalleryPhoto007" width="640"/>Astrophotographer Barry Shupp was hoping to get photos of the meteor shower from Hustontown, Pennsylvania. Instead, he had a chance to photograph the International Space Station while also catching a meteor passing by overhead.





  • May Camelopardalids meteor shower dazzles some, bores others
  • But it's connected to a comet making a rare close pass by Earth, NASA says
  • You can see 209P/LINEAR with a telescope
  • Or you can catch it online at observatory service Slooh


Share your best shots of the meteor shower with CNN iReport, and you could be featured on CNN.
(CNN) -- So after all the hype, was the lost sleep and the sore necks from looking at the sky worth it?
People throughout North America could ask that question Saturday, hours after witnessing a unique meteor shower that was visible in the middle of the night.
Judging from social media responses, this cosmic event appeared to have little bang in some places, while delivering a few prize goods elsewhere.
But for die-hard star geeks, there will be an Act II, an even bigger treat, as the last part of the shower -- a comet -- passes by Earth, beginning Saturday evening.
Whatever the verdict, there will probably never be a second chance for the May Camelopardalids meteor shower. Many showers come annually, in October, December, January and April, said NASA meteor observer Bill Cooke.
In August, for example, we will see the return of the spectacular Perseid meteor shower.
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Slooh meteor shower visible to some
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Perseid meteor shower lights up the sky
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Time-lapse of the Perseid meteor shower
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Renata Arpasova spent the early morning hours Sunday photographing the Orionid meteor shower from Wiltshire, England.

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Determined to experience his first meteor shower undisturbed by cloudy skies, Robbie López drove out to Chester, Virginia, to photograph the Orionids.

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Kevin Lewis stayed up late and braved cold weather just so he could experience the serenity of watching the Orionids from North Wales.

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Robbie López stood out in a remote field in Chester, Virginia, to photograph the Orionid meteor shower.

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Mike Black photographed the Orionids at 5:00 a.m. from Belmar, New Jersey. "It is worth it to see this natural phenomenon. I am always excited when I see one, it never gets old or boring or tiring," he said.

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As a science teacher, Mike Black says he has always been a fan of meteor showers. "They remind us that we live on a small rocky world with other bits of rock flying around space," he said.

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Using a Canon 5D Mark II camera, Mike Black photographed the Orionid meteor shower early Sunday morning. "When one of those bits of rock enters our atmosphere, it burns up and we get to enjoy a meteor shower. It's just one of nature's spectactular shows," he said.

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Bill Vaughn says he always enjoys watching a meteor shower with his wife, especially because they never know what to expect. He photographed the Orionids from Mount Lemmon, Arizona.

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Hans-Dieter Fleger photographed the Orionid meteor shower from the foot of Mount Gaustatoppen in Stavsro, Norway, early Sunday morning.



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Capturing the Orionid meteor shower


But the Camelopardalids shower, named for the constellation the shooting stars appeared to fly out of, was a rare gift from the planet Jupiter.
The biggest planet in the solar system bent the meteors' orbit with its powerful gravitational pull so that they would collide with Earth.
"Next year, it will tug the debris field away from the Earth, and we won't see a meteor shower, so this is kind of a one-shot deal," Cooke said.
Rare comet pass
The debris field derives from the coming comet, which bears the uninspiring name 209P/LINEAR.
Astronomers have stopped coming up with fancy nomenclature for the hundreds of comets they spot and instead give each new one a number and the name of the project that discovered it.
LINEAR stands for Lincoln Near-Earth Asteroid Research.
Jupiter will fling the comet our way, too, causing it to fly by our planet at a distance of 5 million miles.
"A comfortable distance, which is good," Cooke said. Its core is 1 to 2 miles wide, and a direct hit to Earth would be disastrous.
Even though 209P/LINEAR passes by every five years while orbiting the sun, this time around it will offer a rare sight to hobby astronomers.
"The comet normally doesn't pass this close," Cooke said.
Anyone with a consumer model 3-inch-reflector telescope should be able to see it in the north sky late Wednesday, if the heavens are clear.
Those who want a sneak peek through a more powerful telescope can get it from 6 p.m. ET Saturday via the online observatory service Slooh.
To have 209P/LINEAR's debris field pass the Earth ahead of its comet is like putting the tail before the dog.
Usually debris fields follow comets just like their tails do. Again, Jupiter was the culprit. It ripped off the debris field and threw it out in front of 209P/LINEAR.
"Jupiter is a big gravitational bully of the solar system," Cooke said. This particular comet and its field just happen to pass through that planet's orbit.
After many passes around the solar system, the comet also doesn't have much of a tail left, so gazers shouldn't expect to see a long, stunning ribbon trailing it, just a short dash.
Surprise package
Cooke said from the start that the Camelopardalids could be a star-studded gala or a dud.
NASA couldn't predict it ahead of time, because the debris field was formed some 200 years ago, when astronomers couldn't see it, Cooke said. They merely knew that it was coming.
"It's kind of like being able to predict rain at 11:30 in the morning but not being able to predict a drizzle or a thunderstorm."
Reactions from shooting-star gazers across the country ran the gamut on social media, and judging by some, it did deliver fireworks.
"Izzi and I literally just saw and heard a meteor explode right before our eyes," .hannaH posted to Twitter
"Just saw a awesomely bright meteor with a blue tail!! #MeteorShower ," Twitter user Carmen said from Chicago.
But it served up some anticlimax, too. A few netizens called it a complete bust.
CNN iReporter Jean-Francois Gout had only one word to describe the event:
 
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