Some meteor showers give a more-or-less reliable performance the same time each year, but others have an occasional year with (sometimes substantial) activity punctuating many years with little or no activity. The June Boötids, which may or may not be visible any night this week but most likely Wednesday morning or Wednesday evening if at all, is one such shower. This year, however, any meteors that do occur will be compromised by the nearly-full moon.
One hallmark of the June Boötids is that they are unusually slow meteors, so they’re easy to identify if you see one. Look for the meteors to emanate from a region of the sky a few degrees north of the top of the “kite” of Boötes.
Of the 38 meteor showers listed in the IMO‘s “Working List of Visual Meteor Showers”, the lowest V∞, which is the pre-atmospheric Earth-apparent meteor velocity, is 18 km/s. The three showers with that velocity are the π Puppids (Apr 23, δ=-45°), June Boötids (Jun 27, δ=+48°), and Phoenicids (Dec 2, δ=-53°). For those of us living in the northern U.S., the June Boötids is the only one of these three showers we are ever likely to see.
Outbursts of June Boötids activity approaching or even exceeding 100 meteors per hour (single observer hourly rate) occurred in 1916, 1921, 1927, 1998, and 2004. When the next outburst will occur none can yet say.
In eight years between 2001 and 2014 inclusive, my friend and expert visual meteor observer Paul Martsching of Ames, Iowa observed fourteen 0-magnitude or brighter June Boötids, the brightest of which was -4 in 2004. He has seen June Boötids activity as early as June 22nd and as late as July 1st. Of the 44 June Boötids he has observed, 52% were white in color, 27% yellow, and 21% orange.
Though we’re always at the mercy of the weather and the Moon and a workaday world that does little to accommodate the observational astronomy amateur scientist, meteor watching is a rewarding activity. Even when meteor activity is sparse, you have time to think, to study the sky, to experience the beauty of the night.