Over the Dunes
Photograph courtesy Jack FuscoA Geminid meteor streaks across the sky above the beach in Ocean City, New Jersey, in a picture taken December 14. The piles come from sand blown onto city streets during Hurricane Sandy.
The annual Geminid meteor shower, which peaked last weekend, usually produces dozens of shooting stars per hour—making it one of the strongest and most reliable celestial shows around.
(Related: "Sky-watchers Get Set for Cosmic Fireworks Show.")
Published December 18, 2012
Radiant Skies
Photograph by Wally Pacholka, TWANTen meteors on seven different frames combined to show the radiant—the point in the sky from which the Geminid meteors appear to originate.
The picture was taken December 14 in Yosemite Valley, California.
Published December 18, 2012
Barnstormer
Photograph by Jeffrey Phelps, APA Geminid meteor zooms over a barn in Saukville, Wisconsin, on December 14.
Historically the Geminids were overlooked by most amateur astronomers simply because the annual event occurs so close to the busy holiday season and frigid winter nights—but that's beginning to change thanks to its rising intensity over the past few decades.
Published December 18, 2012
Soaking It In
Photograph by Abir Sultan, European Pressphoto AgencyIsraelis relax in a hot spring near the Dead Sea during the peak of the Geminid meteor shower in a long-exposure photograph taken December 14.
Since Geminids hit the atmosphere at about 20 miles per second (32 kilometers per second)—slower than other meteor showers—they create beautiful long arcs across the sky that can last for a second or two.
Published December 18, 2012
Mountain High
Photograph by Tom Cuccio, Your ShotGeminids slice the sky over a glittering Aspen, Colorado, in a picture taken December 14.
Geminid meteors appear to radiate from the shower's namesake constellation, Gemini, the twins from Greek legend.
Published December 18, 2012
Jersey Geminid
Photograph by Jay Cassario, My ShotA Geminid shoots over the Hurricane Sandy-damaged remains of the 59th Street Pier in Ocean City, New Jersey, on December 14.
Most annual meteor showers happen when Earth passes through clouds of debris left behind by passing comets, causing tons of dust to rain down on the planet in short periods of time.
The Geminids are unusual, though, because they're thought to be the only annual meteor shower created by an asteroid-like object: 3200 Phaethon.
Published December 18, 2012
Night Lights
Photograph by Sunna Gautadottir, Your ShotGeminid meteors light the sky over Borgarnes, Iceland, on December 15.
"There were so many of them," said photographer Sunna Gautadottir, "and it was just way too beautiful to describe in words."
Published December 18, 2012
Photograph courtesy Dennis di Cicco, Sky & Telescope
Published December 18, 2012
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