South Carolina

One of the biggest meteor showers of 2024 happens over SC soon. Here’s when to watch

Quadrantid Meteors will be visible over South Carolina soon.
Quadrantid Meteors will be visible over South Carolina soon. ABC News

South Carolina residents will soon be privy to a dazzling light show to welcome in 2024 that doesn’t involve fireworks.

The Quadrantids, generally considered to be one of the best annual meteor showers, peak in early January over the northern hemisphere, according to NASA.

This specific meteor shower has been underway for weeks. However, the meteor shower will peak the night of Wednesday-Thursday, the time when people will have the best chance to see a great display, according to Space.com.

Unlike many other meteor showers, which have peaks that can last a couple of days, the Quadrantids peak only lasts about 6 hours.

“The reason the peak is so short is due to the shower’s thin stream of particles and the fact that the Earth crosses the stream at a perpendicular angle,” the NASA website states.

Still, viewers can get a lot of bang during those few hours. Under perfect conditions, between 60 and 200 Quadrantid meteors can be seen per hour during the peak.

Quadrantids are also known for their bright fireball meteors, which are larger explosions of light and color that can last longer than an average meteor streak. Quadrantids tend to have larger particles than other meteors, which account for the fireballs.

When to watch

If you want to see any meteors, your best bet is to watch between 2 and 6 a.m., before the light of dawn ends the show. However, Space.com says that 4 a.m. is the peak for this year’s meteor shower in South Carolina.

How to watch

Find an area away from the city or street lights. Lie flat on your back with your feet facing northeast and look up, taking in as much of the sky as possible.

In less than 30 minutes in the dark, your eyes will adapt and you will begin to see meteors.

Where do meteors come from?

Meteors come from leftover comet particles and bits from broken asteroids.

According to skyandtelescope.org, the parent of the Quadrantids is a small object, “designated 2003 EH1 for its discovery year (now it’s also known as asteroid 196256).”

The object orbits the sun every 5.5 years between the orbits of Earth and Jupiter. Peter Jenniskens, a meteor specialist, discovered in 2004 that this body is responsible for the Quadrantids, the website states.

Patrick McCreless
The State
Patrick McCreless is the Southeast service journalism editor for McClatchy, who leads and edits a team of six reporters in South Carolina, Georgia and Mississippi. The team writes about trending news of the day and topics that help readers in their daily lives and better informs them about their communities. He attended Jacksonville State University in Alabama and grew up in Tuscaloosa, AL.
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