Skip to content

Why Are Meteors More Frequent After midnight?

composite photo of the Perseid meteor shower

In short, where you are on earth rotates around to the front of the Earth’s path through space at midnight, so the sky above you collides with more comet dust from then until astronomical twilight starts before dawn, as this article in Bay Nature Magazine, featuring one of my meteor shower photos, explains: Ask the Naturalist: What’s the Best Time and Place to See Meteors?

I’ve met other photographers who seem confused about why I show up until 11 pm to start shooting at midnight, so I’ve also updated one of my tutorial blog posts to include that suggestion: How to Create a Time-lapse Video of a Meteor Shower

Thank you to +BayNatureInstitute for licensing my photo for your article!
#astrophotography #meteorshower #nightphotography #timelapsephotography

How to Create a Timelapse Video of a Meteor Shower

Comments

1 thought on “Why Are Meteors More Frequent After midnight?”

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Loading Facebook Comments ...