Locals had the rare task of directing traffic on a moonless
Monday night in Mitzpe Ramon in the heart of the Negev Desert, a
spot surrounded by terrain described as similar to a lunar or
Martian landscape.
The Feinberg family from the Tel Aviv region drove for
two-and-a-half hours for the display but the number of meteors,
about one or fewer per minute, failed to truly light up the
Ramon Crater's dark night sky as in previous years.
"We are here waiting for the stars to fall, the children are
very impatient," said Eliran Feinberg, 42, who works for an air
cargo company.
The Perseid meteors, which reach their peak every August, are
produced by debris from the 109P/Swift-Tuttle comet that passes
by the Earth every 133 years. It last passed in 1992.
Professor Rennan Barkana, head of the astrophysics department at
Tel Aviv University, said this year's shower was not as intense
because the Earth had passed through a sparser part of the
comet's debris than previously and a smaller amount of particles
had entered the atmosphere.
(Additional reporting by Daria Sito-Sucic in Sarajevo, Writing
by Ori Lewis. Editing by Patrick Johnston)
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