Last year’s Perseids shower was a bit of a washout, as I recall – although David Moore of Astronomy.ie reported seeing 115 meteors in just over 2 hours. So fingers crossed for this year’s show, even with the Moon hanging around. The Perseids are due to peak on 12th August but as the Nasa press release says, “the show is already getting underway.” SpaceWeather, as usual, has more – including the International Meteor Organization’s activity profile. To help find Perseus overhead you can create your own custom sky chart at Heavens Above or just select your nearest town from their database – here’s one for Belfast. More on the Perseids here.The comet responsible, 109P/Swift-Tuttle, last dropped by our neighbourhood in 1992, itll drop by again in 2126 – passing within 15 million miles of Earth – theres an [java req] orbital diagram here.
Fortunately we probably wont be around in 3044 when its been estimated that itll pass within 1 million miles of Earth. Thats roughly just 4 times the distance from the Earth to the Moon..