Geminids and the Mittens

2022-12-25: Geminids and the Mittens
Copyright: Chuck Derus
Model: gpt-4.1
Prompt version: 1.0

Asteroid 3200 Phaethon’s annual gift to planet Earth always arrives in December. Otherwise known as the Geminid Meteor Shower, the source of the meteoroid stream is cosmic dust shed along the orbit of the mysterious asteroid.

Near the December 13/14 peak of the meteor shower’s activity, geminid meteors are captured in this night sky skyscape, composited from 22 images of starry sky taken before the moon rose over Monument Valley in the American southwest.

The bright stars near the position of the shower’s radiant are the constellation Gemini’s twin stars Castor (blue) and Pollux (yellow).

As Earth sweeps through the dusty stream, the parallel meteor trails appear to radiate from a point on the sky in Gemini due to perspective, and so the yearly shower is named for the constellation.

From the camera’s perspective, this view of three prominent buttes across Monument Valley also suggests appropriate names for two of them. The third one is called Merrick Butte.