Monica Reed

Look up to the Orionid Meteor Shower tonight!

Silhouette of young couple watching Meteor Shower. Nigh Sky. Photo: Shutterstock

Look up to the Orionid Meteor Shower tonight!

The sky will be alive with activity tonight!  The Orionid meteor shower is about to be at it’s most active tonight!

The Orionids are considered a major meteor shower based on the amount of visible meteors that can be seen streaking across the sky!  The Orionids runs from around the first week of October to the first week of November.

FUN FACT: The constellation Orion — where shower gets its name because the meteors point back to a spot in Orion known as the radiant point.

The American Meteor Society says that the meteors per hour may be visible this week, with that number increasing to as many as 20 per hour during the peak on Oct. 20 and Oct. 21.

The Orionids are really just bits of dust and debris left behind from famed Halley’s Comet from its previous trips through the inner solar system.  All that cosmic debris and grime slams into the upper atmosphere and burns up in a display we see on the ground as shooting stars and even maybe a fireball.

If you blink, you might miss it!  As the Orionids enter our atmosphere at an extremely fast velocity of roughly 147,000 miles per hour (66 kilometers per second). That said, a fair amount of these meteors leave persistent trails that last for a few seconds. Some even fragment and break up in a more spectacular fashion.

Tips for the meteor shower.  Find a spot away from light pollution with a wide open view of the night sky.  Bundle up if needed, lay back, relax and let your eyes adjust. You don’t need to focus on any part of the sky, but the Orionids are so named because their trails appear to originate from the same general area of the sky as the constellation Orion.

The absolute best time to look for the Orionids in 2020 is probably in the early morning hours before dawn on Oct. 21, but this shower is known for an extended peak, so you should have a good chance of seeing some meteors if you get up early a few days before or after that peak date as well.

Here’s a positive, the moon will set before peak morning viewing hours, so that’ s a perk to beautiful viewing!

News from ClarksvilleNow.com

Aaron Tidwell. (Clarksville Police Department, Contributed)

yesterday in News

MISSING PERSON ALERT: Police ask for help locating 34-year-old man

The Clarksville Police Department is asking for the public’s assistance in locating a 34-year-old missing person.

Reported structure fire at Sonic located on 1805 Madison Street. (Contributed by Barb Edwards)

yesterday in News

UPDATE: Madison Street back open after structure fire at Sonic

The Clarksville Police Department is currently conducting traffic control for Clarksville Fire Rescue for a structure fire at Sonic, 1805 Madison St.

yesterday in News

Work week weather: Warm and breezy ahead of midweek storms

Clarksville forecast: Warm, breezy conditions will continue to start the week, with highs climbing into the low 80s by Tuesday.

yesterday in News

Parent describes moments before, after school bus crash that killed two Clarksville girls

When a Kenwood Middle School bus crashed Friday, some of the parents were traveling behind it. What they saw was heartbreaking. But they were able to jump in to help.

Participants gather during the No Kings protest at McGregor Park on March 28, 2026. (Wesley Irvin)

yesterday in News, Photos

‘It’s time for us to push back’: Protesters gather at McGregor Park for No Kings day | PHOTOS

A No Kings protest was held at McGregor Park on Saturday, with a large crowd gathering along the side of Riverside Drive.