Nottinghamshire treated to amazing meteor shower in perfect conditions
Our region had the best view of the meteor shower with clear and dark skies as the shower coincided with a new moon.
The Perseid meteor shower occurs when debris from the tail of the Swift-Tuttle comet, which last passed near Earth in 1992 and is not due to return until 2125, collides with the atmosphere.
Advertisement
Hide AdAdvertisement
Hide AdThe annual spectacle peaked on Wednesday night and into the early hours of Thursday with up to 100 shooting stars per hour.
“It has been a spectacular show this year,” astronomer Morgan Hollis, of the Royal Astronomical Society, said. “We have been be able to a see a lot more than normal.”
Her we see the Perseid meteor shower over The Major Oak in Sherwood Forest, Nottinghamshire in the early hours of this morning.