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How to Watch the Radiant Geminid Meteor Shower Tonight

dotancohen

I drove for six hours with my son last night to watch the Geminids. We watch the Persids every year, but this time was the first to watch the Geminids. They are a very different shower, we could immediately see the difference.

My advice: use online dark sky maps to find the darkest places. It makes a huge difference. And for this winter meteor shower, look at the current satellite imagery for your area to find a place with little cloud cover.

Do not use your phone while out there! Live without it for a few hours. The phone, and flashlights, vastly affects how well your eyes will see the meteors. Remember, you are literally looking at objects the size of a grain of sand, 100 to 200 kilometres away.

Bring hot chocolate in a large thermos. And warm hats. And somebody you love.

tracerbulletx

“The other stars are going to be all stationary, so you’ll see this moving across the sky, and it’ll leave a little tail behind it"

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xnx

Is there good software that will isolate clips of meteors from hours of video? I'm pretty sure I could do it with edge detection, but I assume someone smarter than me has already done this.