Space News: What’s up for August 2021
- Preston Dyches
What's up for August? Prime time for the Perseids, Jupiter and Saturn at “opposition,” and why the third moon of the season is kind of special.
August brings the best-known meteor shower of the year, the Perseids. This annual meeting shower happens each year as Earth crosses the debris trail of comet Swift-Tuttle. Most of these meteors are grains of dust up to the size of a pea and they create fabulous "shooting stars" as they burn up an Earth's atmosphere.
Although Perseids can be seen from mid-July through late August, the most likely time to see any meteors is a couple of days on either side of the peak.
This year the peak falls on the night of Aug. 11 and into the predawn hours of Aug. 12. (Think of that as "prime time" for the Perseids.)
Under really dark skies, you could see almost one per minute near the time of maximum activity. This year's peak night for the Perseids benefits from a moon that sets early in the evening, so it won't interfere with the faint meteors, but before it sets that evening, be sure to check out that gorgeous crescent moon in the west after sunset with brilliant planet Venus.
To enjoy the Perseid meteor shower, just find a safe, dark location away from bright city lights, lie down or recline with your feet facing roughly toward the north, and look up.
The meteors appear to radiate from around the constellation Perseus, but they can streak across the sky anywhere above you.
NASA also has a way for you to catch some Perseids online. NASA's Meteor Watch team plans a livestream overnight on Aug. 11. Visit http://go.nasa.gov/2021perseids for more details.
August is perhaps the best time this year to enjoy viewing Jupiter and Saturn, as both planets reach opposition this month.
“Opposition” is the term for when a planet is on the same side of the solar system as Earth and directly opposite from the Sun. It happens each year, as Earth loops around in its orbit, passing by the much slower-moving gas giant planets. Opposition is also near the time when Earth is closest to the planet, so this is when the planet tends to look its biggest and brightest.
Now, opposition does technically have a precise moment when the sun, Earth, and the planet line up, but in practice it's better to think of it as a period of time, usually about a month.
For Saturn, opposition takes place this year on Aug. 2 and for Jupiter, it's Aug. 19. For the latest close-up views and discoveries from Jupiter, follow NASA's Juno mission with NASA's solar system exploration website and social media.
As you're enjoying Jupiter and Saturn during August, watch as the increasingly full moon slides beneath the pair of planets over several days, from the 19th to the 22nd.
Plus, the full moon on Aug. 22 is what's known as a seasonal blue moon, as it's the third full moon out of four this season, where normally each season there are only three. This happens every two-and-a-half to three years or, as they say, “once in a blue moon.”
You can catch up on all of NASA's missions to explore the solar system and beyond at www.nasa.gov.
Preston Dyches works for NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.