May 31st Could Be the Most Powerful Meteor Storm in Generations, or Nothing at All

Be sure to watch the skies on the last morning of May, for a possible Tau Herculid meteor outburst.

If predictions hold true, we may be in for a rare meteor outburst from an obscure meteor shower on May 31st topping a thousand meteors per hour… or we may see nothing at all. Welcome to the wonderful world of meteor shower predictions and prognostications.

The story starts with the discovery of periodic Comet 73P/Schwassmann-Wachmann 3 back in 1930 from the Hamburg Observatory. (We’ll be referring to it as simply ‘Comet 73P’ from here on out). Astronomers Arthur Wachmann and Carl Schwassmann caught this fuzzball comet on glass plate captures as a +9.5 magnitude object, moving through the constellation Hercules.

But it was the orbit of Comet 73P that gave observers pause: going around the Sun as a short period comet once every 5.4 years with an orbit inclined just over 11 degrees relative to the ecliptic plane, there was a good chance the comet would be a splendid object on its May 31st 1930 passage 0.062 Astronomical Units (AU) (9.2 million km) from the Earth.

Orbit
The orbit of Comet 73P. Credit: NASA/JPL

But such was not to be, as Comet 73P was a decided under-performer during the 1930 apparition, only topping out at +7th magnitude and never really breaking naked eye visibility. Curiously, astronomer George Van Biesbroeck noted that the comet appeared ‘spindle-shaped’ as seen through the giant 40-inch refractor at Yerkes Observatory—perhaps the first time humans had set eyes on the 1.3 km nucleus of a comet.

After Comet 73P receded from view, not much more was seen of the comet until 1995, when it increased dramatically in brightness. This 400-fold increase was all the more dramatic, as the comet was actually over 1.3 AU from the Earth at the time.

Comet 73P
Fragments of Comet 73P, imaged by the Spitzer Space Telescope. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/W. Reach

Observations from the European Southern Observatory caught four separate fragments for what was once Comet 73P; later observations by Hubble and the late infrared Spitzer Space Telescope in 2006 added dozens more.

Hubble
Hubble witnesses the 2006 fragmentation event. Credit: NASA/HST/STScI

When comets travel close to the Sun, they lay down debris streams of dust shed during their inner solar system passage. If a planet happens to be in the way (such as the Earth) a meteor shower occurs, witnessed as silent flitting streaks through the sky. The Perseid and Geminid meteors are two great annual showers, originating from comet 109P/Swift-Tuttle and ‘rock-comet’ 3200 Phaethon, respectively.

Comet 73P
The many tails of Comet 73P. Image credit and copyright: Michael Jaeger.

Now, debris streams evolve over time, as the complex tug of the Sun and planets pull them into and out of the Earth’s path. The Andromedids, for example, where once a great storm in the late 19th century, which has since fallen into obscurity.

Fast-forward to 2022, and models show that things could get interesting later this month. Comet 73P lays down a stream known as the Tau Herculid meteors. The shower takes its name from its 1930 radiant position near the +3.9 magnitude star Tau Herculis, though in modern times, the radiant has drifted into the adjacent constellation of Boötes the Herdsman.

On most years, the Tau Herculids aren’t much to look at. In 2022 however, things could get interesting as Earth is due to cross a couple key streams laid down by Comet 73P. Specifically, astronomer Jérémie Vaubaillon working at the Institute for Celestial Mechanics and Computation of Ephemerides in Paris shows an encounter with streams from 1892 and 1897 laid down pre-discovery. Now, just how dense these streams are is anyone’s guess. Another pair of studies, however, one by a Japanese team led by astronomer Shun Horii and another German team led by astronomer Hartwig Lüthen both reached the same conclusion: that the Earth will run headlong into the 1995 fragmentation stream this year.

Earth
Earth on the morning of May 31st at ~5:00 UT/1:00 AM EDT, versus the incoming Tau Herculid meteor stream. Credit: Dave Dickinson

A May Meteor Storm in the Making?

The key date and time to watch for a possible 2022 Herculid outburst is on the morning of Tuesday, May 31st at around 5:00 Universal Time or 1:00 AM Eastern Time EDT. This places the radiant high in the sky for Northern Hemisphere observers in the pre-dawn hours, another plus. The Moon is also well out of the way, reaching New just the day prior on May 30th.

A ten-fold increase versus the expected Zenithal Hourly Rate (ZHR) of 14 per hour from the late 19th century streams could mean a ZHR of 140 (similar to the annual Geminids and Perseids)… while a hundred-fold increase could see the 2022 Tau Herculids topping true storm levels, at over 1,400 per hour.

radiant
The Tau Herculid radiant on the morning of May 31st, as seen from the U.S. East Coast. Credit: Stellarium.

The Tau Herculids are a ‘slow shower’ with an inbound velocity of 16 km/second—slow that is, compared to, say the November Leonids, with a swift 72 km/second incoming velocity. Expect any Tau Herculids you see to be slow and stately emanating from a radiant near the globular cluster Messier 3, about a third the way between the bright star Arcturus and the end of the handle of the Big Dipper asterism.

Radiant
A closeup view of the Tau Herculid radiant.

Believe me, a meteor outburst approaching a thousand meteors per hour is an unforgettable sight; we once witnessed just such a Leonid storm from the dark deserts of Kuwait in 1998. Of course, the 2022 Tau Herculids could dazzle or fizzle… but do you really want to take the chance on missing out? Set your alarm on the morning of May 31st (or stay up late) if skies are clear… you just never know what you might see.

-Read Joe Rao’s full paper on a possible meteor outburst from Comet 73P.

-Lead image credit: A Geminid meteor outburst from 2020. Image credit and copyright: Jeff Sullivan.