On April 23, 2019 I took this picture of a bright Lyrid meteor falling in the sky north of our Jarnac Observatory. It is not often I can actually capture meteors using a camera. |
Skyward for
June 2019.
Jeopardy
James.
Of
all the programs that Wendee and I enjoy on our television set, the game show Jeopardy is one of our favorites.
For a half hour each day, Wendee and I play along as the three
contestants try to respond correctly to host Alex Trebek’s clues. In our tradition, if Wendee or I get a
question answered, we applaud each other.
It’s fun. We were saddened to
learn of Trebek’s cancer diagnosis and we hope he will continue to enjoy a long
life. Last month the show has been unforgettable. In his first 31 days as a contestant, James
Holzhauer has earned an astonishing $2,462,216 in winnings. On the show that aired Friday, May 31,
Holzhauer won $79,633.
Wendee and I particularly enjoy the
astronomy clues that come up on shows like Jeopardy. Here is a clue from last Friday: “On November 12, 1833, these meteor showers
were seen across all of North America, sparking the serious study of meteor
showers.” Jeopardy James got it
right: “What are the Leonids?!”
The
Leonids are a meteor shower which occurs whenever the Earth punches its way
through the sand grain sized debris left by a comet. The debris spreads out across the comet’s
entire orbit about the Sun. In the case
of the Leonids, when the parent comet Temple-Tuttle itself appears in the sky
once every 33 years, a meteor storm, rather than a shower, sometimes occurs
when meteors, or shooting stars, can fall at rates of a meteor per second. It happened in 1833, the year of the Jeopardy clue, in 1966, and somewhat
less intensely over the period from 1996 to 2002.
As I watched this program, my mind
harked back to our visit to Australia in 2001 where we saw 2,406 meteors
scratch the sky over the course of a few hours. The display that night began as
our group was relaxing on a dry lakebed.
A bright shooting star appeared in the east, brightened rapidly as it
soared across the sky, then disappeared in the west. Before the cheering ended a second meteor
repeated the event. At the height of the
show, I witnessed nine meteors appearing
simultaneously. We continued to see
meteors well into the morning twilight.
I have observed meteors on more than
two hundred nights that began with a night at the
original Jarnac cottage north of Montreal.
I saw a magnificent, brilliant shooting star low in the southwest. The picture the accompanies this article is
of a brilliant Lyrid that appeared to wave at me from the northern sky in late
April of this year. Even though I have
and use telescopes each night, perhaps my favorite observing session happens
when I sit down outside, lookup, and watch the sky for these always welcome
messages from space that we call meteors.
Maybe someday, James Holzhauer will get to enjoy the shooting stars as
well.
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