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The annual Geminid meteor shower is upon us, and it will put on a dazzling show for skywatchers when it peaks in the intervening night of 13 and 14 December, NASA said in a statement.
"With August's Perseids obscured by bright moonlight, the Geminids will be the best shower this year," said Bill Cooke of NASA's Meteoroid Environment Office.
"The thin, waning crescent moon won't spoil the show," Cooke said.
Meteor showers are named after the location of the radiant, usually a star or constellation close to where they appear in the night sky. The Geminid radiant is in the constellation Gemini.
The shower will peak overnight on 13-14 December with rates around one per minute under good conditions, according to Cooke.
Geminids can be seen on nights before and after the 14 December peak, although they will appear less frequently.
NASA added that the Geminids are active every December, when the earth passes through a massive trail of dusty debris shed by a weird, rocky object named 3200 Phaethon.
The dust and grit burn up when they run into earth's atmosphere in a flurry of "shooting stars."
"Phaethon's nature is debated," said Cooke. "It's either a near-earth asteroid or an extinct comet, sometimes called a rock comet."
NASA will also broadcast the Geminid shower live via Ustream, starting at sunset on 13 December from the Automated Lunar and Meteor Observatory at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama.
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