The 2012 Quadrantids, a little-known meteor shower covered on live-stream

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Meteor ShowerTHUNDER BAY – Technology – Tonight’s meteor shower will be covered live by a NASA camera that will allow you to tune in online and watch. NASA states, “The camera is mounted at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala. During the day, you’ll see a dark gray box or perhaps some very colorful static — the camera is light-activated and will turn on at dusk each evening.”

The Space Agency shares, “The 2012 Quadrantids, a little-known meteor shower named after an extinct constellation, will present an excellent chance for hardy souls to start the year off with some late-night meteor watching.

“Peaking in the wee morning hours of Jan. 4, the Quadrantids have a maximum rate of about 100 per hour, varying between 60-200. The waxing gibbous moon will set around 3 a.m. local time, leaving about two hours of excellent meteor observing before dawn. It’s a good thing, too, because unlike the more famous Perseid and Geminid meteor showers, the Quadrantids only last a few hours — it’s the morning of Jan. 4, or nothing.”

“Like the Geminids, the Quadrantids originate from an asteroid, called 2003 EH1. Dynamical studies suggest that this body could very well be a piece of a comet which broke apart several centuries ago, and that the meteors you will see before dawn on Jan. 4 are the small debris from this fragmentation. After hundreds of years orbiting the sun, they will enter our atmosphere at 90,000 mph, burning up 50 miles above Earth’s surface — a fiery end to a long journey!”

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