Aurigids
Aurigids is a meteor shower occurring primarily within September.[1]
The comet Kiess (C/1911 N1) is the source of the material that causes the meteors. The comets orbital period is stated as approximately 1800 to 2000 years, with showers observed in the years 1935, '86, '94 and 2007 .[2][3]
α & δ
The Alpha were discovered by C. Hoffmeister and A. Teichgraeber, during the night of the 31st of August 1935.[4][5]
See also
References
- ↑ © 1997-2011 International Meteor Organization retrieved 16:55 11.10.11
- ↑ Jenniskens, P. and J. Vaubaillon (2007), An unusual meteor shower on 1 September 2007, Eos Trans. AGU, 88(32), 317, doi:10.1029/2007EO320001 16:14 11.10.11
- ↑ IAU-MDC retrieved 16:25 11.10.11
- ↑ Gary W. Kronk website 17:35 11.10.11
- ↑ article written by Joe Rao in Sky and Telescope magazine August 23, 2007 approx' 17:45 retrieved 11.10.11
Sources
- aurigid.seti 16:35 11.10.11
External links
- C Hoffmeister:Meteorstrome-Meteoric-currents-WorldCat 17.41 11:10:11
images
Chart
- Aurigidcount AMES research centre 16:35 11.10.11
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