Rain of meteors donated a spectacle to the sky

A meteor shower has lit up the skies of Europe and North America on Saturday evening, giving observers of the sky a rare opportunity to see the spectacle of free - eyed stars. Astronomers said hundreds of falling stars would be visible in heaven from 12 to so....
Astronomers said hundreds of falling stars would be visible in the sky from August 12th to August 13th in a spectacle that could be visible worldwide.
With a new moon that guarantees a background more dark than usual for the show, falling stars will be brighter than ever,” astronomers say.
“I think everyone should see this”, says Miralem Mehic, a Bosniak, part of an international group of heavenly observers who followed the show to the sand pyramids, a natural sand columns area in the vicinity of the southern town of Foca.
The spectacle, called the rain of the Persian meteors, actually returns to the heavens for every shell and is most visible in the northern hemisphere, in isolated areas where there is little artificial enlightenment. The show happens when the earth passes through the remains of the 109P comet Swift Tie, discovered in 1862.
Metheers are pieces of rock and sand that strike the earth's atmosphere, heat and burn. Most of them break down as they descend, but some even explode. Sunday's spectacle is projected to be even more fascinating and bright than ever.
It is expected, according to experts, that the observers of the sky can see a star falling every three or four minutes. While according to NASA, between 60 and 70 meteors will be visible in an hour.
The peak, or best time to watch the show, will be the early hours of Monday morning. And experts have advised that the best place to follow the amazing show, in all its beauty, will be in open areas, away from the lights of the cities or the dwellings.












