July 24
The peak of the shower is predicted to occur Sept. 1st at 11:37 GMT. This comes during daylight for Europe and much of North America. But the western United States and Canada, as well as much of Alaska and Hawaii will still be in pre-dawn darkness and would be in an excellent position to view it.
The meteors are called "Aurigids" because they appear to fan-out from the constellation of Auriga, the Charioteer.
Astronomer Peter Jenniskens revealed his outlook for the 2007 Aurigid Meteor Shower. He forecast rates of at least 400, possibly even exceeding 1,000 meteors per hour.
This prediction is based on the modeling of the trajectories of dust particles ejected from comet Kiess, which in turn fits the three past outbursts of the Aurigids. But this time we will hit-very close to the center of the dust cloud, within 39,000 miles (63,000 km.).
The debris left behind by Kiess, a comet last seen in 1911, is what produces the Aurigids. The comet takes approximately 2,500 years to orbit the Sun, but there are also dense trails of dust traveling along its orbit.
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