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Astronomer Captures ‘Impact Flash’ On The Moon Amid Geminid Meteor Shower; Watch

An astronomer may have captured Geminid meteor strikes on the Moon. Daichi Fuiji, a photographer and the curator of Hiratsuka City Museum in Japan, recently shared a visual captured using his telescope. It shows bright flashes on the Moon which may have caused by a meteor impact.

This is highly likely as Earth is passing through the debris of the asteroid 3200 Phaethon, source of the Geminid meteor shower. It’s possible the Moon is also in the range of the debris trail. The meteor shower, which is the brightest and biggest of the year, will peak on December 13-14, NASA said. Although, a few meteors can be seen until December 21-22.

Taking to X, Fuiji shared his observation of the bright flashes on the lunar surface from December 8.

“There was another lunar impact flash tonight. I filmed it at 360fps from my home at 22:34:35 on December 8, 2024 (slow playback) and was able to confirm it with multiple telescopes. Bright meteors and fireballs have been appearing every day, but lunar impact flashes have also been captured one after another,” he captioned his post.

Fuiji posted a video of lunar impact last year as well. He recorded a meteor striking the Moon on February 23.

“Since the moon has no atmosphere, meteors and fireballs cannot be seen, and it only shines at the moment a crater is formed,” he said.

The photographer has shared multiple images and videos of the meteors streaking across the sky lately.

According to Space.com, Fuiji predicted that the lunar crater made by the meteor after impact could measure around 39 feet in diameter. It could be imaged by NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter or India’s Chandrayaan 2 orbiter later, he said.

ALSO SEE: Geminid Meteor Shower 2024: All About This Year’s Best Cosmic Show And When To Spot It

ALSO SEE: Meteor As Bright As Sun Enters Earth Over Philippines; Videos Go Viral

(Image: X/@dfuji1)



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