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Leonid Meteor Shower 2015 Peaks Tonight
Peak activity will occur tonight, but the shower stays active until Nov. 30.

The Leonid meteor shower peak will light up the sky Tuesday, a shower that NASA says produces “some of the fastest meteors out there.”
The shower will peak November 17-18, with the best viewing at about midnight local time, according to NASA. But if you can’t catch the peak, the shower stays active until Nov. 30.
The moon is expected to be a small crescent that sets at midnight, making for great viewing conditions afterwards. But of course viewing conditions also depend on the weather forecast.
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Local Weather Conditions
Tonight’s weather.com forecast for Round Rock calls for clear skies and a temperature in the high 40s. Combined with the favorable moon, the viewing conditions for the Leonid peak should be excellent.
Find out what's happening in Round Rockfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
What you need to know about the Leonid peak
The Leonids come from comet “55P/Tempel-Tuttle,” which orbits the sun every 33 years.
At 44 miles per second, the Leonids are some of the fastest around and peak at about 15 per hour.
In 1966, conditions were just right for viewers to see “thousands of meteors per minute” during the Leonids, according to NASA.
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