Brand-new meteor shower from 'Christmas comet' may appear over Earth for 1st time this week

A brand-new meteor shower triggered by the 'Christmas comet' 46P/Wirtanen may appear over Earth for the first time on Dec. 12, though it will be visible from only a small sliver of the world.

The greenish comet 46P/Wirtanen is responsible for the new shooting stars.
The greenish comet 46P/Wirtanen is responsible for the new shooting stars.
(Image credit: SA / ESAC Astronomy Club / W. Van Reeven)

A brand-new meteor shower may light up Earth's skies on Dec. 12, arriving just before the peak of the colorful Geminid meteor shower, a new study suggests.

Meteor showers occur when meteoroids, or rocky particles from outer space, burn and glow upon entering Earth's atmosphere. Most meteor showers come from debris streams of comets or asteroids crossing Earth's orbit. In this regard, the new shower isn't unique; it arises from the comet 46P/Wirtanen, a "Jupiter family" comet (meaning it orbits between the sun and Jupiter). But unlike other meteor-generating fragment streams, which stem from comets or asteroids that get overheated after coming too close to the sun, the debris stream intersecting Earth this week was created during an extra-close encounter with Jupiter 50-odd years ago.

Abha Jain
Live Science contributor

Abha Jain is a freelance science writer. She did a masters degree in biology, specializing in neuroscience, from the Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru, India, and is almost through with a bachelor's degree in archaeology from the University of Leicester, UK. She's also a self-taught space enthusiast, and so loves writing about topics in astronomy, archaeology and neuroscience.