Starwatch: Lyrid meteor showers to grace skies with annual stellar show | Meteors

The world’s oldest shower in the world will work on the sky this week. Nerid Legreed shower is active from April 16-25, but he is on Monday evening.
The chart shows the scene looking east of London in the middle of the night, where it becomes April 21, April 22. The radioactive (the point on the sky that the meteorites seem to arise, and here. LyridsIt was found near the borders of Lira, Lear, and Herqal, the hero. Comfortable, it is somewhat close to the bright star Vega.
Away from the street lights, observers can expect to see about 15 to 20 bright and fast nices per hour. They tend to hit the air while traveling about 48 km per second.
Although Lyrids are not more prolific meteor shower in the calendar, it can sometimes produce bright gunfire individually. Every 60 years or so, the bathroom is also vulnerable to sudden explosions when hundreds of meteorites become visible.
One of this hero was arrested in the records of the ancient Chinese court. In 687bc, the sky became full of nicknames that state that “the stars fell like rain.” This list makes Lyrids older Nizak shower.
It is difficult to see the bathroom from the southern hemisphere, as the radiolet rises only after midnight.