Yes. Halley's comet is responsible for the Eta Aquariids and the Orionids.
When the reincarnate of king arthur comes to rise camalot.
The Corvids are associated with Corvus. However, they were only briefly seen in 1937 but not since, and so they are not an annual shower like many of the other well known meteor showers are.
Meteor showers occur when a meteor comes too close to the earth and gets drawn in by the earth's gravity. The light you see trailing behind the meteor (shooting star) is Ice melting off of it from the sun's heat.
there is no possible way for there to be a meteor shower
Some meteor showers are caused by Earth passing through the remnants of an old comet or parts of the trail of debris left by comets. The Leonid meteor shower is caused by Earth passing through the trail of comet Temple-Tuttle.
That's not uncommon at all. In a "meteor shower" you might see five in a MINUTE and it not be unusual. Meteor showers are the remnants of old dead comets. As the comet comes past the sun in its orbit, it sheds dust and pebbles nearby, and some of these are a little slower and some a little faster, but still pretty close to the same orbit. Some of these orbital paths happen to intersect Earth's orbit and when Earth comes through the path, we have a meteor shower. Because Earth's orbit is remarkably stable and regular, Earth passes repeatedly through the same spots in its orbit on pretty much the same calendar dates each year. So in many cases, astronomers have mapped out the orbital paths of those old comets and can predict with varying degrees of accuracy when the Earth will experience a meteor shower. And because the orbital path of the shower is known, we can predict about what direction the shower will come from. -- further -- As the Question was asked on January 6th, I'm going to assume that it was prompted by a recent sighting. There are certain meteor showers which occur around this time Mid-December ...... The Geminids Late-December...... The Ursids Early-January......... The Quadrantids
Meteor Shower Attack is a Finishing Move created by Ginga Hagane using his Storm Pegasis 105RF. Pegasis shoots into the sky using all of its energy, forms his constellation, then comes shooting down surrounded by little shooting stars.
There are tiny dust-sized particles in Earth's path around the Sun. These particles are usually leftovers from asteroids or comets.When Earth passes through these particles, they burn up in our atmosphere producing bright lines. This is called a meteor shower.. . .a group of meteors that have an orbit that intersects the orbit of Earth, resulting in a large number of meteors entering the atmosphere in a relatively short span of time. Said another way. . .Meteor showers typically come about due to temporarily high concentrations of sun-orbiting debris that crosses the orbital path of Earth and, hence, collide with her atmosphere.While there are no "comet groups", comets being invariably solitary, debris cast off from a comet during its close approach to the sun can participate as "meteoric" space junk that encounters Earth during a meteor shower. Meteor showers tend to arise from old comets that have broken up and spread out along the comet's orbit. A meteor shower happens when the Earth's orbit intersects one of these old comets' orbits. That is why the same shower happens around the same date each year, and the meteors in that shower all appear from the same 'radiant point'.
Halleys comet comes back around every 76 years.
After it hits, it comes to a standstill.
The Perseid meteors are associated with the comet Swift-Tuttle. As the comet comes close to the sun, it starts to melt, and it leaves a trail of rocks and other debris behind. As the Earth passes through this trail, there is increased meteor activity as the rocks left behind by the comet hit the atmosphere. Links can be found below.
Oh, dude, the meteor shower is coming when the Earth passes through a debris field left by a comet. It usually happens at the same time every year, like a cosmic reunion. So, just mark it on your calendar and make sure to look up at the sky when the time comes. It's like nature's own fireworks show, but with way cooler effects.