In article , Nigel Cook
writes
Hi Nigel,
Do you work in Winchester?
Know little of astronomy but i do remember
Nov 1968 stuck in a school hall listening
to boring speaches when the best display
of my life-time of Leonids was doing its stuff.
I remember having to sneak out of church-parade to see my first partial
solar eclipse. That's grown ups for you - no sense of priority...
I doubt it was a desending firework rocket but as
i bothered to take details - if there is anyone collates reports
I was at 50 deg, 55.2 N ; 1 deg, 23.2W (St Denys,Southampton)
Today,Time 21.01.45 GMT if South West Trains platform info sigs
are correct.
NW from me descending about 10 deg from directly vertical
The Leonid's radiant was still below the north-eastern horizon at that
time, so it wouldn't have been a Leonid. However, it may possibly have
been an Andomedid. There are some details of the Andromedid shower he
http://comets.amsmeteors.org/meteors...dromedids.html
If it could be classed as a fireball (-3, or brighter), then you could
report it following the instructions on the Society of Popular
Astronomy's site:
http://www.popastro.com/sections/meteor/fireball.htm
If you are interested, the predictions for this year's Leonids are he
http://leonid.arc.nasa.gov/1998.html
Unfortunately, UK observers will not see the first predicted peak (13th
Nov), as the radiant is below the horizon. UK observers may catch some
of the second predicted peak (19th Nov). However, there is a good deal
of uncertainty with the predictions, so it's certainly worth keeping an
eye on the sky throughout the coming week.
--
David Entwistle