Introduction to How the Leonid Meteor Shower Works
Every year in November we are treated to an unusual and fascinating sky show called the Leonid meteor shower. If you live in the right place and stand outside at the right time, you can see hundreds or thousands of shooting stars every hour.
![]() A meteor is the streak of light caused by a piece of space debris burning up in the atmosphere. |
In this article, we will take a look at meteorites and shooting stars in general and November's Leonid shower in particular!
Meteors
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Discussing meteor activity can be tricky because the terminology is confusing. The term meteor actually refers to the streak of light caused by a piece of space debris burning up in the atmosphere. The pieces of debris are called meteoroids, and remnants of the debris that reach the Earth's surface (or another planet's) are called meteorites.
Meteoroids have a pretty big size range. They include any space debris bigger than a molecule and smaller than about 330 feet (100 meters) -- space debris bigger than this is considered an asteroid. But most of the debris the earth comes in contact with is "dust" shed by comets traveling through the solar system. This dust tends to be made up of very small particles.
So how can we see a meteor caused by such a small bit of matter? It turns out that what these meteoroids lack in mass they make up for in speed, and this is what causes the flash of light in the sky.
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The extreme heat breaks the molecules of both the meteoroid material and the atmosphere into glowing ionized particles, which then recombine, releasing light energy to form a bright "tail." A meteor tail caused by a grain-sized meteoroid is a only a few feet (about a meter) wide but, because of the high speed of the debris, may be many miles long.
The Leonid Shower
The Leonid shower that occurs every November is an event caused by the Earth passing through an especially dusty area of space.
![]() Photo courtesy NASA Arizona, November 1966 - The Leonid meteor shower rained 2,300 meteors per minute for 20 minutes. |
The extra dust is there because the orbit of the Temple-Tuttle comet passes near Earth's orbit every 33 years and leaves behind a dusty trail.
To view the Leonid shower, you just go outside at the appropriate hour, look toward the constellation Leo (hence the name "Leonid") and you should be able to see shooting stars occurring several times per minute!
For more information on the Leonid meteor shower and other space phenomena, check out the links on the next page.
Lots More Information
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- How Stars Work
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- How big does a meteor have to be to make it to the ground?
- Why doesn't the space shuttle burn up when it enters the atmosphere?
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