The Geminids are back this week, slipping into the December sky with the kind of steady activity that makes the shower a winter fixture. The peak is expected over the night of December 13-14, a stretch that usually brings some of the strongest meteor counts of the year. Most estimates point to rates that can climb past 120 meteors per hour under clean, dark skies. The event will not be possible to witness in real-time for everyone, which is why the online feeds matter this time.
The Geminids meteor shower begins as early as late evening, but the prime hours fall between 2 am and 4 am IST on December 14, according to The Free Press Journal. That is when the debris path aligns with Earth’s motion, and the radiant in Gemini climbs high enough to sharpen the view. Even with city lights, brighter streaks remain visible. The darker the sky, the more consistent the shower looks.
For those unable to step outdoors or leave urban areas, livestreams are becoming the easier route. The Virtual Telescope Project will run a real-time broadcast from its observatory in Italy, capturing the shower through wide-field instruments designed for faint meteor tracking. NASA and the International Meteor Organization sometimes stream parallel feeds on YouTube, though these appear closer to the event.
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