Monday, December 13, 2010

Geminid Meteor Shower December 13, 2010

According to some estimates, the “Geminids meteor shower”, that called because they appear to be observers from the constellation of Gemini. Could provide up to 120 shooting stars an hour to those watching in ideal conditions between midnight listening and dawn Tuesday. Saturn’s rings may have arisen after a sort of striptease space. According to a study published today in the digital edition of Nature, the circles of dancing on ice on the planet are remnants of an ancient frozen moon, which lost its crust as it approached the planet.

The Geminids are a steady rain and fertility, one of the best of the year. The rain normally produces 50 meteors per hour or more, or about one every minute, often coming to the Jets running stride.

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