The mid-December Geminids were forecast to be a big meteor shower. Since it is caused by an asteroid it is one of the very few meteor showers not originating from a comet.
The show was supposed to peak at 100 per hour, but the Santa Barbara weather was predicted to be cloudy. Neither forecast happened: the skies were clear, but I saw only several meteors.
I did catch a few with my camera, however. Here’s one streaking from the upper left toward the Constellation Orion on the lower right.
The bright red star in the center of the frame is beautiful Betelgeuse. Even at 550 light-years from Earth (compared to the brightest star Sirius at less than 9 light-years), it is still one of the brightest stars in the sky. That’s because it’s a supergiant with a diameter about 760 times that of the Sun.
The three stars below on a diagonal are Orion’s “belt” stars: Alnitak, Alnilam and Mintaka. Hanging down vertically from them is Orion’s sword with the purple/orange Great Orion Nebula visible in the middle — it is in fact a star nursery.
Caught one!
We saw about 30 last night between 10 PM and midnight.
Since the predicted peak was at 11 AM this morning, we missed out on the big numbers.