How to see the Geminid meteor shower in 2024

The Geminid meteor shower, in December, is usually the strongest and most reliable display of “shooting stars” of the year. Here is how to see the Geminids in 2024!

A bright Geminid meteor photographed on the morning of 13 December, 2020, from Walmer, UK, in the build-up to the shower’s peak. Image credit: Paul Sutherland

Conditions will be less than ideal in 2024 for observing the Geminids as the Moon will be at a waxing gibbous phase on the night of 13/14 December, which is the night the shower reaches its peak. However, on this night, the Moon sets before 3am local time at mid-northern latitudes, leaving more than three hours of darkness before dawn twilight interferes.

In the days before maximum, the Moon will set earlier in the night, leaving even longer to observe in the morning hours.

The Geminids are active from December 4th to the 17th, according to the International Meteor Organization. Rates are expected to be good for a couple of nights around the night of maximum.

At its peak, meteor rates can reach 120 or more an hour, although this is what is called the zenithal hourly rate (ZHR) and calculated for a single observer with perfect skies and a radiant overhead. In practice you will not see so many, but it should still be quite a show if your sky is clear.

The Geminids would probably be a lot better known if they appeared during the summer months, like the Perseids, rather than during mid-winter in the northern hemisphere!

The Geminids are a rich enough shower that you should see some meteors even in years where there is moonlight. Wrap up warm and find a comfortable spot to sit away from street lights. Any Geminid meteors you see which will seem to fly at medium speed across the sky. They enter the atmosphere at around 35 km (22 miles) per second.

If you can only watch when a bright Moon is in the sky, then face the opposite direction, if possible, to avoid its glare.

Related: How to observe a meteor shower

Related: How to photograph a meteor shower

The meteors are called the Geminids because their radiant point lies in the constellation of Gemini. They can appear in any part of the sky, but if you trace their paths back, they will all intersect at this point in the sky. You don’t need to look towards Gemini to see them – it is better to direct your gaze well away from the radiant itself.

Wait until the radiant has lifted itself above the horizon before starting to observe as its altitude affects the number of meteors you will see. For northern observers, activity should pick up from around 10pm local time and last the rest of the night. The observing window is shorter and later in the night for observers in the southern hemisphere from where Gemini spends less time above the horizon.

The yellow blob, close to the bright star Castor (a Gem), marks the radiant of the Geminids on December 13th/14th. Image by Skymania using Cartes du Ciel.

You can follow how active the Geminids are in 2024 by viewing the International Meteor Organization’s live updatesbased on their members’ observations.

We have our own full guide to observing meteors, plus helpful advice on how you can photograph them with a digital camera.

It is generally known that meteor showers are produced by streams of dust shed by comets. These streams cross the orbit of the Earth so that we fly through them at the same time every year.

What is unusual about the Geminid meteor shower is that the parent body has been identified as an asteroid rather than a comet. The asteroid, named 3200 Phaethon, was only identified in 1983 when it was found in images taken with an infrared satellite called IRAS.

A bright Geminid meteor captured during the 2017 display. Image credit: Paul Sutherland

Phaethon has an orbit that brings it to a distance of only 21 million km (13 million miles) from the Sun, and it has been closer in the past. It seems to be still producing dust due to thermal decomposition and fracturing of the asteroid.

Related: Why an asteroid is crumbling into meteor dust

One of the world’s leading authorities in meteor science is Professor Galina Ryabova, of the Institute of Applied Mathematics and Mechanics at Tomsk State University, Russia. She told Skymania News: The evidence is overwhelming that Phaethon is the parent body for the Geminids.

“And while we don’t know much about Phaethon, the Geminids is one of the most studied meteoroid streams, so we may use observations of the shower it produces every December to make some conclusions about its origin.

“The Geminid meteoroid stream structure seems to show its cometary origin. I believe that Phaethon was a comet, captured on its present orbit. It lost volatiles at a catastrophic rate, over just one to three orbital revolutions, and is now an asteroid.”

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