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Meteor Shower

Eta-Aquariids

The Eta-Aquariids is an annual meteor shower active from 19 April to 28 May . It reaches its peak around 6 May . It originates from debris left by 1P/Halley. Under ideal, dark-sky conditions with the radiant directly overhead, observers might see up to 50 meteors per hour (ZHR).

Vital Statistics

Peak Date
6 May
Max Hourly Rate (ZHR)
50
Entry Speed
66 km/s
Radiant (RA / Dec)
338° / -1°

Understanding the Data

The ZHR (Zenithal Hourly Rate) represents the maximum number of meteors a single observer would see per hour under perfect, unpolluted dark skies, assuming the radiant point is perfectly overhead. In practice, city lights and moon glare usually lower the visible count significantly.

The Radiant is the point in the sky from which the meteors appear to originate. You don't need to look directly at the radiant to see meteors—they will dash across various parts of the sky—but the radiant helps identify which shower a meteor belongs to.

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