Meteors and Aurora over Germany
			
		
		
			Image Credit & Copyright:  
Chantal Anders
		
		
			This was an unusual night.
For one thing, the night sky of August 11 and 12, 
earlier this week, occurred near the peak of the annual 
Perseid Meteor Shower.
Therefore, meteors streaked across the 
dark night as small bits cast off from 
Comet Swift-Tuttle came crashing into the 
Earth's atmosphere.
Even more unusually, for central 
Germany 
at least, the night 
sky glowed purple.
The red-blue hue was due to aurora caused by an 
explosion of particles from the 
Sun a few days before.
This auroral storm was so intense that it 
was seen as far south as 
Texas and 
Italy, in Earth's northern hemisphere. 
The featured image composite was built from 7 exposures 
taken over 26 minutes from 
Ense, 
Germany.
The Perseids occur 
predictably every August, 
but auroras visible this far south are more unusual and less predictable.