We can’t all gather on the southern Black Sea coast of Bulgaria to watch the Perseids meteor shower tonight, but perhaps this amazing photo from that location will inspire you to head outside for a look at your own skies. Every August, Earth passes through the trail of debris left by Comet Swift-Tuttle. When Swift-Tuttle’s ‘dirty snowballs’ of dust, ice, rock, and other material hit Earth’s atmosphere, they burn up as the ‘shooting stars’ of the Perseids. If you can, get away from city lights any time between now and Aug 24, find a safe spot outside, and let your eyes adjust to the dark for about 30 minutes. Look to the northern portion of the sky, or find the Perseus constellation, and you’ll start seeing streaks of light tumbling through the sky.
Look to the north sky tonight for the Perseids
Today in History
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Speed skaters in the Gangneung Oval, Pyeongchang, South Korea
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World Book Day
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Pride Month
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Happy Thanksgiving!
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Terraced rice fields, Yuanyang County, China
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Chocolate Hills
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World Frog Day
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International Dark Sky Week
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Kangaroo family for National Hugging Day
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Fin whales: A success story
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A stunning national park in winter white
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A medieval Moorish gem
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Badlands National Park turns 44
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Patriot Day
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Tafilalet oasis in Morocco
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Falling for Rioja
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The Bahamas as seen from the ISS
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Struck by Southwestern beauty
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Perseid meteor shower over Oregon
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Waiting for winter
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Black History Month
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World Elephant Day
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Endangered Species Day
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Penguin Awareness Day
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A different view of sharks
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Bathing boxes at Brighton Beach, Australia
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Tough turf
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Mekong River Delta, Long An, Vietnam
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A Great view from above
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Río Negro, Amazon basin, Brazil
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