Leonid Meteor Shower Peaks Tonight: How to Watch Online

UPDATE: The peak of the Leonid meteor shower has passed. See stargazer photos of the 2012 Leonids here:Leonid Meteor Shower of 2012 (Photos )

Stargazers are hoping for clear, dark skies tonight when the annual Leonid meteor shower will be at its best, but if Mother Nature spoils your show, you can always catch the celestial fireworks display live online.

Scientists at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., will broadcast live views of the 2012 Leonid meteor showeronline from an all-sky camera at the center. Clear weather is forecast during the event, center officials said.

You can watch the Leonid meteor shower live here on SPACE.com via NASA. The webcast is expected to begin by 7 p.m. EST (0000 Nov. 17 GMT).

This sky map for the Leonid meteor shower of 2012 shows the location of the radiant (center) before dawn on Saturday, Nov. 17 - the peak viewing time. CREDIT: StarDate.org

"We're predicting 20-30 meteors per hour over the Americas, and as many as 200-300 per hour over Asia," NASA meteor expert Bill Cooke of the Meteoroid Environment Office the Marshall center said in a statement. "Our forecast is in good accord with independent theoretical work by other astronomers." [Leonid Meteor Shower of 2012 (Photos and Sky Maps)]

The Leonid meteor shower occurs each year in mid-November when the Earth passes through a stream of debris left over by the comet Tempel-Tuttle. The comet orbits the sun once every 33 years and its meteor shower appears to radiate out of the constellation Leo, hence the shooting star display's name.

This year, the peak of the meteor shower will occur in the wee hours of Saturday (Nov. 17), but meteors from the display should still be visible in the night before and after the peak. Because the moon is nearing its new phase, and will have set before the actual peak of the shower, the 2012 Leonids could impressive, NASA officials said.

"The new moon will set the stage for what could be one of the best Leonid showers in years," they explained in a stargazing alert.

In fact, the Leonid meteor shower has already been spotted by some eager stargazers, including night sky photographer John Chumack of Dayton, Ohio. Chumack captured a video video of early Leonid meteors during an observing session late Tuesday (Nov. 13).

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Leonid Meteor Shower Peaks Tonight: How to Watch Online

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