Community Corner

When Spectacular Geminids Meteor Shower 2018 Peaks In St. Louis

The Geminid meteor shower, known for colorful meteors with long tails, starts this weekend in St. Louis.

ST. LOUIS, MO — Astronomers and skywatchers could be light years apart over which meteor shower peak — the upcoming Geminids or late-summer’s Perseids — offers the best chances for spectacular shooting stars.

Weather conditions permitting, the Geminid meteor shower will make its annual appearance Dec. 7 in the skies over Missouri and will beak on the night of Dec. 13-14.

It looks like the weather on Friday will be partly cloudy with showers father out. Tuesday, however, will be sunny, so that may be your best chance to catch a glimpse of the meteors.

Find out what's happening in St. Louisfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

(For more stories like this, subscribe to Patch for daily newsletters and breaking news alerts. You can also download the free Patch app for iPhone and Android.)


The main advantage the Perseids have over the Geminids is that you don’t have to layer up with an extra coat and blankets to see the Perseids because they fly in August. But for our money, the Geminid meteor shower is well worth standing outside on a cold, dark night and looking up. The Geminids are reliably the most prolific meteor shower of the year, producing up to 120 shooting stars an hour — typically outperforming the summertime favorite.

Find out what's happening in St. Louisfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The Geminids — which are multicolored, like blazing Christmas baubles — should put on a dazzling holiday show, often leaving long tails as they streak across the sky.

The meteors will be flying as early as 9 or 10 p.m. on the night of Thursday, Dec. 13, but Bill Cooke, NASA’s meteor expert, said the best time to see the Geminids is around 2 a.m. local time on Friday, Dec. 14.

“The moon will be first quarter, so it will set around midnight,” Cooke told Space.com. “There will be no moonlight to interfere with the Geminids this year.”

The meteor shower radiates from the bright constellation Gemini (the twins). In the Northern Hemisphere, look in the southwestern sky for the constellation Orion — it’s the one with the three stars that make up the hunter’s “belt” — and then look up and to the left to find Gemini, which is high in the southwestern sky.

But don’t look directly at Gemini — you’ll miss some of the amazing tails associated with this wintertime favorite. Instead, look slightly away from the constellation.

Here’s a fun fact about the Geminids: First observed in 1833 from a riverboat on the Mississippi River, the shower is growing stronger as Jupiter’s gravity tugs the stream of particles left behind by the shower’s parent, the asteroid 3200 Phaethon, closer to Earth.

There’s one more meteor shower this year, the often overlooked Ursids, which produce a sleepy five or 10 meteors an hour, though occasional outbursts have produced 25 or more an hour. The show runs Dec. 17-25, and peaks Dec. 21-22, but there won’t be much to see. A full moon will wash out all but the brightest meteors.

The Quadrantids meteor shower ushers in 2019, running just a few days, Jan. 1-5, and peaking Jan. 3-4. This shower is thought to be produced by dust grains from an extinct comet that wasn’t discovered until 2003. A thin crescent moon shouldn’t interfere too much with what seasky.org predicts could be a decent show this year. The meteors radiate from the constellation Bootes, but can be seen from anywhere in the sky.

Photo By NASA via Getty Images

Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.