The Lyrids 2025

Falling stars during the April Lyrids 2020, Adobe Stock, by Ingo Bartussek

Spring Sky Watch

Lyrid Meteor Showers

 

The Lyrid Meteor Shower is back again, with occasional bright-burning fireballs, reliable shooting star streams, and the possibility of surprise surges. Peak view time for the Lyrids this year will come just before dawn tomorrow morning.

Celestial conditions will be fair, so get ready for a good sky watch! This year’s peak activity is the day after Last Quarter Moon, so there won’t be excessive moonlight to interfere with viewing the meteor shower.

Lyrid Meteor Shower over Lanyon Quoit, Cornwall, iStock Photo, by Ashley Hampson

History

Humans have been watching this meteor shower annually since before the birth of Christ. The oldest record we have of a Lyrid sighting originated in China thousands of years ago.

What we see burning in the sky during Lyrid showers is space debris left behind by Comet Thatcher, discovered in 1861 by an amateur astronomer named A. E. Thatcher.  While the debris remains in the path of the Thatcher’s orbit, the comet won’t be back near Earth for another two hundred and fifty years.

More Information

A Meteor (a.k.a. a shooting star) is a piece of space debris that becomes so hot that it glows from friction as it enters the atmosphere. When Earth passes through a field of cosmic debris in her orbit around the sun, we experience a Meteor Shower. Every year there are dozens of meteor showers visible from the Earth’s surface. Each event has its own unique statistics…

Event Statistics

Conditions:   Fair. This year’s peak is a day after Last Quarter Moon

Duration:   April 16 to April 25

Peak:   Just before dawn on April 22

Parent:   Debris from Comet C/1861 G1 (Thatcher)

Radiant:   Above northeast horizon near the Lyra constellation

Rate:   10 to 20 meteors per hour in ideal conditions.

Surges:   Uncommon but surges possible to 100 per hour

Luminosity:   Medium brightness

Fireballs:   Occasional fireballs occur

Trains:   Not significant for this event

Velocity:   29 miles per second

How to Watch

View from a dark location away from light pollution from cities, houses, and streets.

For the best viewing experience, find a position where you can view the entire area of the sky around the radiant point (the spot where the meteors appear to emanate from).

For the Lyrids, look to the northern constellation Lyra.

Astro Poe

April nights are still chilly, so dress accordingly. A chair and blanket may make viewing more comfortable. Warm tea and/or hot cocoa and some snacks can take a sky watch to the next level.

Get into position twenty minutes before your planned view time to allow your eyes to adjust to the night sky.

Meteor showers are best watched with your naked eyes.

Binoculars and telescopes limit your field of view and make it difficult to spot meteors outside of the view through magnifying lenses.

Enjoy the 2025 Lyrid Meteor Shower!

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The night sky is forever changing with the Earth’s daily rotation and annual orbit around the sun. Every time you glance up at the stars you get a different view of the cosmos, like a living work of art.