The Quadski gives the term “all-terrain vehicle” a whole new meaning.
Check out the meteor shower this week. At it ‘s peak tomorrow morning Aug 12 between 2 am and sunrise. nordgrenexperience.com
Image Credit: NASA/Bill Ingalls
The Perseid meteor shower, one of the biggest meteor showers of the year, will be at its brightest early in the morning on Wednesday, August 12. Read on for some tips on how to watch the night sky this week – and to find out: what exactly are the Perseids, anyway?
Credit: NASA/Bill Ingalls
Your best chance to spot the Perseids will be between 2 AM and dawn (local time) the morning of August 12. Find a dark spot, avoid bright lights (yes, that includes your phone) and get acclimated to the night sky.
Your eyes should be at peak viewing capacity after about 30 minutes; though the Moon may block out some of the dimmer meteors, you should still be able to see up to 15-20 an hour. If you’re not an early bird, you can try and take a look soon after sunset (around 9 PM) on the 11th, though you may not see as many Perseids then.
Credit: NASA/MEO
If it’s too cloudy, or too bright, to go skywatching where you are, you can try again Wednesday or Thursday night – or just stay indoors and watch the Perseids online!
Our Meteor Watch program will be livestreaming the Perseids from Huntsville, Alabama on Facebook (weather permitting), starting around 9 p.m. EDT on August 11 and continuing through sunrise.
Because all of a meteor shower’s meteors have similar orbits, they appear to come from the same place in the sky – a point called the radiant.
The radiant for the Perseids, as you might guess from the name, is in the constellation Perseus, found near Aries and Taurus in the night sky.
Credit: NASA/Joel Kowsky
Right! The Perseids are actually fragments of the comet Swift-Tuttle, which orbits within our solar system.
If you want to learn more about the Perseids, visit our Watch the Skies blog or check out our monthly “What’s Up” video series. Happy viewing!
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com
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I am part of the transitional boundary between two generations. I‘m not quite a Millennial, but I do not identify as Gen Z by any means. I am old enough to vaguely remember the 90s, but not to appreciate them; I grew up on reruns of 90s shows, and watched movies from the 80s and 90s because that’s just what my parents owned when I was born.
I saw the fall of analog and the rise of digital; I grew up with a VCR (which I still own to this day), and witnessed the transition to DVD. We are currently in the middle of a new transition away from physical media entirely, and I’m not sure I like it; I want to be able to have things, not just to license a copy that can be taken away at the studio’s whims. Everything is a rights license or a subscription now, bleeding you dry so you can have access rather than ownership.
Cellphones became ubiquitous in my lifetime; when I was a kid, nobody had one, they were big and expensive, and you had to pay for each minute. If you went over your monthly allotment, you would either be charged an arm and a leg or your phone would just stop working, dropping all calls because you just don’t have any time left. Does anyone remember when they had text limits? It was the dark ages! I didn’t get a cellphone until I was in high school, and now I can’t imagine letting your kids leave the house without one.
Smartphones didn’t even exist until I was in middle school, and now they’re the default, the standard. They’ve revolutionized the way we communicate, they’ve gotta be the most influential technology of the 21st century, hands down. It peaked early. That said, smart devices are the bane of my existence because now we live in an Orwellian surveillance state where the government and private companies basically own you. It’s depressing.
I’m sure every generation goes through phases like this; what is history if not one prolonged period of change. Nothing is static, there is no long term status quo, everything keeps moving forward no matter what. The progress of time is the most predictable thing in existence, yet we are almost always blindsided by it. Like, I know 2008 was 11 years ago, but I haven’t really internalized that fact, it’s abstract, because 2008 is simultaneously yesterday and ancient history from a lifetime ago.
All right an electronic puppy!!
This robot can climb fences and open doors.
Paul McCartney during the recording of ‘Hey Jude’ at Trident Studios, July 1968.
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Take photos and videos underwater with your phone. 📸