Geminid meteor shower set to shine bright: When and where to watch 120 shooting stars an hour
हिंदी में सुनें
Listen to this article in Hindi
The Geminids appear each year around in December, offering more than 100 meteors per hour in dark skies.
A clear December night often feels special, but the Geminids bring a warmth of their own. Their quick silver streaks can turn quiet hours into a small, personal show. Many watchers say the shower feels almost cinematic, with bright trails sliding through calm winter skies.
Why Are The Geminids So Bright?
The Geminids appear each year around 13 December to 15 December, offering more than 100 meteors per hour in dark skies. This shower stands apart because it comes from the rocky asteroid 3200 Phaethon, not a typical icy comet. Its heavy debris creates chunky, bright streaks that move fast across the night sky.
When and Where Can You Watch Them?
India gets its best views from midnight to pre-dawn, when Gemini rises in the east. You do not need to find the constellation exactly, but knowing its direction helps you plan. Viewers should stay out for at least 1 hour because meteor activity arrives in uneven bursts. Your eyes also need time to adjust fully to the dark.
How Can You Improve Your Viewing?
Light pollution hides many faint meteors, so darker spaces work better. A rooftop with dim lights, an open field, a quiet park or a hill station point can help. Choose a wide view so trees or buildings do not block the sky. Telescopes or binoculars are unnecessary because they narrow your view. Use a mat or reclining chair, dress warmly and avoid your phone for 20–30 minutes before watching. A torch covered with red cellophane keeps your night vision safe.
What Should You Expect in the Sky?
Geminid meteors seem to arrive from Gemini, but they may cross any part of the sky. Some appear as faint, needle-like flashes. Others grow into vivid fireballs that stay in memory. The shower rewards patience, as each streak is cosmic dust burning at high speed far above Earth.
If you wait long enough, the night may deliver more than you expect.