Get Ready for a Lot of Shooting Stars This Weekend

Saturday night will offer peak viewing of Geminid meteor showers across Northern Hemisphere
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Dec 9, 2025 2:26 PM CST
Geminids Are Heading Back for a Sky Show This Weekend
A meteor streaks over a church during the annual Geminid meteor shower near the village of Zagorie, Belarus, on Dec. 13, 2017.   (AP Photo/Sergei Grits, file)

It's time for one of the strongest meteor showers of the year. The Geminids peak this weekend and are visible through mid-December, according to the American Meteor Society. The meteors tend to be yellow in color and can be seen across the globe, but the best viewing happens in the Northern Hemisphere, per the AP. Sky-gazers could see up to 120 meteors per hour under dark skies during the peak Saturday night into Sunday's predawn hours, according to NASA.

Meteor showers appear when fast-moving space rocks hit Earth's atmosphere and burn up, leaving behind fiery tails—the end of a "shooting star." Stray meteors are visible from Earth on any given night, but more prominent showers happen annually when the planet passes through crowded streams of cosmic debris. How exciting a shower will look from Earth depends on many factors, including the amount of debris and the moon's brightness, which can overshadow the meteors' glow. The Geminids have a good window for peak viewing before the moon crashes the party after midnight.

To enjoy the Geminid show, bundle up and venture away from city lights, which can drown out fireballs. The meteor shower will appear over the whole sky, so look to the darkest part or search for the Gemini constellation for which the shower is named. Lie in a sleeping bag or lean back in a lawn chair and wait 15 to 20 minutes for your eyes to get used to the darkness—that's when the meteors will appear as tiny glows streaking across the sky. Avoid bright lights from cellphones, which can make it harder for your eyes to make that adjustment.

"The other stars are going to be all stationary, so you'll see this moving across the sky and it'll leave a little tail behind it," said Bethany Cobb Kung, an astronomer with the George Washington University. Stay outside and take in the show for as long as the weather allows. Most meteor showers come from the leftovers of comets, but the Geminids originate from the sun-orbiting asteroid 3200 Phaethon.

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