For the Leonids, that's Leo. If you see a shooting star and trace its trajectory backward to Leo, it is a Leonid. However, all meteor showers' shooting stars can appear anywhere in the night sky.
In any event, the hour just before the break of dawn, when the Sickle of Leo is high in the south ... most people envision a sky filled with shooting stars pouring down through the sky like ...
The New Year starts with a bang as Quandrantids peaks on Jan. 2 and 3. This is one of the largest meteor showers of the year, ...
Don't look directly at Leo to find meteors, as the shooting stars will be visible throughout the sky. Make sure to look around and move your gaze to nearby constellations as meteors further from ...
Venus, now shining at a magnitude of -4.5 in the constellation Leo, reaches its “greatest ... Will Unleash 'Shooting Stars' This Weekend-How To WatchBy Jamie Carter As an inner planet to Earth ...
Keep your eyes peeled (no binoculars or telescope necessary) for its 10-20 “shooting stars” per hour (a dark ... the meteors is the constellation of Leo.