Pioneers of the Children’s Museum monitor meteor showers from the Katameya Observatory .. Today

Pioneers of the Children’s Museum monitor meteor showers from the Katameya Observatory .. Today

Today at 3 p.m., in collaboration with the National Astronomical and Geophysical Research Authority, the Children’s Museum of Mixtures of Meteors will host an event where children can watch stars, planets, and meteors with their families from the Katameya Observatory using the largest astronomical telescope in the Middle East.

Children will learn about the celestial bodies that orbit the Earth and are released towards them on November 4 and 5, storming their airspace as a bull meteor rash.

The bull rash, which is a minor meteor tear with an average of roughly 10 meteors per hour, is one of the spectacular and stunning celestial phenomena that may be observed, tracked, and photographed. It is a phenomenon of interest to everyone astronomy and those who are interested in this field.

From the time the moon enters the night on November 4 until its sunset at 2:45 am the following day, the moon and buyer are connected. Jupiter is the solar system’s giant.
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The goal of these excursions, according to Hayat Khattab, Secretary-General of the Heliopolis Association, is to track unusual astronomical phenomena and bring them closer to children in a simple and understandable way, provided that these activities are carried out in collaboration with the relevant centres and bodies that provide different astronomical devices and experts specialised to accompany children and explain to them.

Osama Abdel-Wathir, director of the Children’s Museum, stated that the meteor showers are active every year with the crossing of the globe during the fragments scattered along the orbit of asteroids or asteroids, as it strikes pieces the size of a grain of sand on top of the atmosphere and burns at an altitude of about 70 to 100 km and manifests itself to us in the form of meteors.

From the Katameya Observatory, pioneers of the Children’s Museum currently keep an eye on meteor showers.

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