
The Quadrantids are the first major meteor shower of the year, kicking off January with a bang. The shower is briefly active every year between January 1 and January 6 but peaks in intensity for a few hours between January 3 and January 4. Stargazers in the Northern Hemisphere are best positioned to see the shower tomorrow night and the lack of harsh moonlight this week will heighten the experience. But when exactly should you head outdoors for the best chance to spot the brilliant meteor shower?
What time will the Quadrantid meteor shower peak?
Unlike other major meteor showers peppered throughout the year, the Quadrantids will only peak for a few hours between Thursday and Friday.
This year, the International Meteor Organization expects the meteors to reach zenith around 2am UTC – a “favourable” time for European longitudes.
The astronomical group said: “New Moon on January 6 creates optimum viewing conditions for the expected Quadrantid maximum on January 4.
“For many northern hemisphere sites, the shower’s radiant is circumpolar, in northern Bootes, from where it first attains a useful elevation after local midnight, steadily improving through till dawn.”

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The group added the peak is relatively short-lived with an average duration of just about four hours.
This makes the Quadrantids particularly easy to miss if you do not hit the open window of time.
The Organization added: “Quadrantid activity tends to be very low more than a day or so from the peak, but bright shower meteors may also occur in some nights around the peak on either side.”
During the Quadrantid maximum, meteor rates vary between as little as 50 an hour to about 200 on rare occasions.
Tomorrow night, up to 60 shooting stars an hour will dash across the starlit skies.
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How to see the Quadrantid meteor shower tomorrow?
Meteors are incredibly fast moving objects and are at times hard to spot if you do not have any previous experience with meteor hunting.
Most astronomers will advise you to leave you telescopes and binoculars at home and simply rely on your own two eyes to get the job done.
The meteors will break out in the sky from their so-called radiant point in the constellation Bootes.
From there, the shooting stars will dash in every direction imaginable, which will make them hard to track.
The best thing for you to do is to find a dark spot without harsh sources of light that could interfere with the task at hand.
Spread out a comfortable blanket on which you can lie down and try to take in as much of the sky as possible.
Keep in mind meteors will move too fast for you to follow them closely, so just sit back, relax and enjoy the spectacle.
Astronomer Bruce McClure of EarthSky.org said: “You don’t need to find the meteor shower radiant to see the Quadrantid meteors.
“You just have to be at mid-northern or far-northern latitudes, up in the wee hours of the morning and hope the peak comes at just the right time to your part of the world.
“The meteors will radiate from the northern sky, but appear in all parts of the sky.”