Weather
Lyrid Meteor Shower Peaks Soon In Twin Cities: Best Times To Watch
The Lyrid meteor shower will send shooting stars across Minnesota's skies this week, offering a dazzling show for skywatchers.
MINNEAPOLIS, MN — After a three-month drought, meteor showers are back, starting with the Lyrids, which peak overnight Monday and Tuesday. Whether you’ll be able to see the shooting star show, known for its fireballs, depends on weather conditions in the Twin Cities.
Here's the National Weather Service forecast from the Minneapolis-St. Paul Airport:
Monday: A 20 percent chance of showers before 1pm. Mostly sunny, with a high near 60. Northwest wind around 10 mph.
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Monday Night: A 30 percent chance of showers after 1am. Partly cloudy, with a low around 42. North wind 5 to 10 mph becoming southeast after midnight.
Tuesday: A 40 percent chance of showers. Partly sunny, with a high near 68. East southeast wind around 10 mph.
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Tuesday Night: A 30 percent chance of showers. Partly cloudy, with a low around 42. Southwest wind around 10 mph.
Wednesday: A 20 percent chance of showers. Mostly sunny, with a high near 65. West wind around 10 mph.
April’s pink moon — so-called because this is the time of year pink ground phlox and other wildflowers begin blooming — will be about 50 percent illuminated, which should allow for decent meteor shower viewing conditions.
The Lyrid meteor shower is an average sky show, producing about 15 or 20 shooting stars an hour, but it historically has produced bright fireballs that blaze across the sky and leave dust trails that last for several seconds, according to NASA. Fireballs can be bright enough to penetrate bright moonlight.
The Lyrids can fire off a surprise, though, with counts of as many as 100 shooting stars an hour, according to NASA. Sightings of these heavier showers occurred in Virginia in 1803, Greece in 1922, Japan in 1945, and the United States in 1982.
As with most meteor showers, this one is best viewed in the early morning hours before dawn. Find a dark sky, take along a reclining lawn chair if you can, and blankets to keep you warm. Although meteor showers do have radiant points — in this case, it’s in the constellation Lyra, close to Vega, one of the brightest stars in the night sky — but you don’t have to locate it to see shooting stars, which will appear all over the sky.
The Lyrid meteor shower runs through the end of the month, intersecting with the Eta Aquariids, which offer a much better chance to see shooting stars. Sometimes called the Eta Aquarids, the meteor shower rambles along from April 15 to May 27, and peaks May 5-6. This shooting star show has a broad peak, and that means skywatchers may see elevated numbers of meteors a few days before and after the peak.
At the peak, about 30 meteors may be seen an hour, although as many as 60 an hour have been reported, according to NASA.
These shooting stars are known for speed, entering Earth’s atmosphere at about 148,000 miles an hour, and also for leaving glowing “trains” — incandescent bits of debris — that last for several seconds to minutes.
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