Shooting stars are often confused with stars. However, it is a wrong notion which has penetrated the mindset of people. Shooting stars are streaks of light, visible to the naked eye, which actually represent the path of a meteoroid or meteor, when it enters earth's surface. The universe looks empty, but it has particles of dust and rocks in the outer space. We are so accustomed to viewing stars and planets in the sky that when a fleet of light descends to the ground, it seems like a star falling from the sky.
A shooting star can be seen with the naked eye, although it requires constant scanning of the night sky and a little luck. It can appear suddenly and burn out quickly. Talking about meteorite showers, when a comet comes close to a star, the heat of the star causes a fleet of space debris. If earth passes through one of these trails, the result is a meteor shower or a meteor storm. At this time of the year, a viewer can see dozens or even hundreds of meteors, or shooting stars, in a short span of time.
What Causes Shooting Stars
Meteors are chunks of outer space, no bigger than particles of dust or sand. As these particles enter the outer layer of air on earth, they experience a build-up of frictional heat. This heat makes the particles glow and they are assumed to be falling stars, giving them the name of 'shooting stars'. A particularly large meteor may continue to glow for several seconds, appearing to shoot across the sky under its own power. The general population remains ignorant of the actual phenomenon and thinks of a shooting star as a star which has fallen to the ground, rather than a meteorite.




