“You know it’s a good night when a beautiful alignment of planets is
the second best thing that’s going to happen.”
Thursday, August 12th, is such a night. (Tomorrow!)
From Nasa Science News:
The show begins at sundown when Venus, Saturn, Mars and the crescent Moon pop out of the western twilight in tight conjunction. All four heavenly objects will fit within a circle about 10 degrees in diameter, beaming together through the dusky colors of sunset. No telescope is required to enjoy this naked-eye event.
The planets will hang together in the western sky until 10 pm or so. When they leave, following the sun below the horizon, you should stay, because that is when the Perseid meteor shower begins. From 10 pm until dawn, meteors will flit across the starry sky in a display that’s even more exciting than a planetary get-together.
The Perseid meteor shower is caused by debris from Comet Swift-Tuttle. Every 133 years the huge comet swings through the inner solar system and leaves behind a trail of dust and gravel. When Earth passes through the debris, specks of comet-stuff hit the atmosphere at 140,000 mph and disintegrate in flashes of light. These meteors are called Perseids because they fly out of the constellation Perseus.
Swift-Tuttle’s debris zone is so wide, Earth spends weeks inside it. Indeed, we are in the outskirts now, and sky watchers are already reporting a trickle of late-night Perseids. The trickle could turn into a torrent between August 11th and 13th when Earth passes through the heart of the debris trail.

2010 is a good year for Perseids because the Moon won’t be up during the midnight-to-dawn hours of greatest activity. Lunar glare can wipe out a good meteor shower, but that won’t be the case this time.
As Perseus rises and the night deepens, meteor rates will increase. For sheer numbers, the best time to look is during the darkest hours before dawn on Friday morning, Aug. 13th, when most observers will see dozens of Perseids per hour.
Looking northeast around midnight on August 12th-13th. The red dot is the Perseid radiant. Although Perseid meteors can appear in any part of the sky, all of their tails will point back to the radiant.
For best results, get away from city lights. The darkness of the countryside multiplies the visible meteor rate 3- to 10-fold. A good dark sky will even improve the planetary alignment, allowing faint Mars and Saturn to make their full contribution to the display. Many families plan camping trips to coincide with the Perseids. The Milky Way arching over a mountain campground provides the perfect backdrop for a meteor shower.
I hope David Archuleta and all his fans get to enjoy the show!


I think David Archuleta’s site connected with JIVE needs a MAJOR FACE LIFT! I like some of the new photos but kind of dull in general.. Let’s write to them and ask them to revamp…and add more of a face lift. Check out the one they have for Kris Allen and Allison and some other artists. David deserves better for sure. Here is their address:
Go to their site and click under artists then D (for David) his site does not stand out as some other artists. GO ARCHIES! We are the most fanatic and greatest fans for him after all
http://www.jiverecords.com/artists
Erik(Quote)
Hey I like the Fan Scene Geek posts!
marc(Quote)
thanks archiefandoc for this!
awestruck(Quote)
thanks! but woops – I meant to have this auto-post tomorrow night – LOL! Well the showers do start tonight! in fact there were some last night already
Archiefandoc(Quote)
I LOVE Fan Scene Geek posts. You are the best AFD!!
Kizzi(Quote)
I hope that we all get to see some meteors! That would be cool.
goldstar(Quote)
Thanks for another interesting article, AFD. I’ll have to try to remember to actually take a good look at the sky tomorrow night! By the way, any “geeky” post containing technical terms like “comet-stuff” is OK with me, LOL.
B in Wisconsin(Quote)
Thanks to Spiff the Spaceman for the idea of this post (and p.s. I got to see one tonight too!)
archiefandoc(Quote)
Cool. I’ll be sure to sneak outside to check them out. Thanks for the heads up, AFD!
ozarko(Quote)
I saw a shooting star last night. Can’t wait for tonight’s shower. WOOT!
archuletafanscene(Quote)
oh no, the fog is rolling in from off the ocean – so far it is still on the other side of the hill – don’t come any farther I say or I’ll be
archiefandoc(Quote)