Science

‘Year’s best meteor shower’ and the moon’s ‘whistle-stop tour’ – what to look out for in the night sky from this weekend

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July is a good month for stargazing, with meteor showers kicking off above our heads and the moon sitting near Saturn, Uranus, the Pleiades, Jupiter and Mars.

Although the meteor showers won’t peak until the end of the month or later, the Delta Aquariids shower should start being visible over the weekend.

Meteor spotting

The Delta Aquariids shower kicks off the summer’s meteor action. It’ll peak around 30 July but should become visible on 12 July, according to Royal Observatory Greenwich.

A meteor shower occurs when the Earth passes through a stream of debris left behind by a comet. In the case of the Delta Aquariids, the comet responsible for the shower has been disputed, although it is now thought to be a sungrazer called Comet 96P/Machholz.

It’s around four miles wide and takes just over five years to orbit the sun, says the Royal Observatory.

As it gets heated by the sun during its orbit, ice in the comet vaporises and loosens small bits of rock and dust which forms the stream of debris that produces the Delta Aquariids meteor shower.

When that debris hits our atmosphere, it burns up, leaving the glowing trails we see in the sky.

Later in the month, the spectacular Perseids shower should start putting on a show.

Visible from 17 July, NASA describes it as the “best meteor shower of the year”.

Throughout the shower, keep an eye out for the “long “wakes” of light and colour behind them,” says the space agency.

There can be between 50 and 100 meteors seen an hour at the peak, which will occur on 12-13 August.

Spotting all of this depends on the weather of course, which looks like a mixed bag for the month.

Read the weather forecast for July here.

The moon and planets

The moon is taking a “a whistle-stop tour” past some of the “night sky icons” this month, according to Royal Observatory Greenwich.

You should be able to spot Saturn near the moon on 24 July.

Just after midnight on 30 July, Uranus and Pleiades, a cluster of young blue stars, will be just above the moon. Looking slightly to the left, you’ll then spot Mars and Jupiter just above the horizon.

This post appeared first on sky.com