The years first big shower is upon us.
Heres everything you better know if you want to catch a glimpse of these fireballs.
News from the future, delivered to your present.
Photo:Lockheed Martin / Garry TIce/ Photo: Korea Institute of Fusion Energy (KFE) / Photo: Xue Bing / Costfoto/Future Publishing (Getty Images) / Photo: ULA / Photo: SpaceX / Photo:Wikimedia Commons/ Image: shi-olga (Shutterstock) / Image: NASA/Image processed by Kevin M. Gill / Image: Brian A Jackson (Shutterstock) / Illustration: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center Conceptual Image Lab
The X-59 in its hangar in Palmdale, California.Photo:Lockheed Martin / Garry TIce
Workers inside the vacuum vessel of the KSTAR tokamak.Photo: Korea Institute of Fusion Energy (KFE)
Image: shi-olga (Shutterstock)
A Quadrantid meteor shower as seen over the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region in January 2022.Photo: Xue Bing / Costfoto/Future Publishing (Getty Images)
The Vulcan rocket booster and second stage during tests in Florida.Photo: ULA
NASA’s Juno mission captured Jupiter’s moon Io on December 30 during its closest flyby.Image: NASA/Image processed by Kevin M. Gill
The latest batch of Starlink satellites included six direct to cell satellites.Photo: SpaceX
An artist’s depiction of the spacecraft on the surface of Apophis.Illustration: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center Conceptual Image Lab
Stromatolites in Western Australia’s Shark Bay.Photo:Wikimedia Commons
Image: Brian A Jackson (Shutterstock)