Lyrids

Active 04-15 – 04-29; peaks ~2026-04-22.

Typical peak
2026-04-22
ZHR
18
Radiant
Lyra
Active period
04-1504-29

Moon at peak (2026-04-22)

Waxing Crescent · 27% illuminated.

Good — a thin crescent has only modest impact on visibility.

Observing tips

  • Best viewed from a dark site with no moonlight after midnight, when the radiant in Lyraclimbs higher and Earth's orbital motion sweeps the leading edge through the meteor stream.
  • Lie flat looking ~50° from the radiant — meteors with longer tails appear at this angle than directly at the radiant point.
  • ZHR 18is a theoretical maximum: clear sky, radiant overhead, no light pollution. Real-world rates at most observers' latitudes are typically 30-60% of ZHR.
  • Allow your eyes 20+ minutes to adapt to darkness; avoid looking at phone screens during the session.

What is ZHR?

Zenithal Hourly Rate (ZHR) is the number of meteors a single observer would see in one hour under perfect conditions: a moonless, cloudless sky with the radiant directly overhead and a limiting magnitude of +6.5. It is a normalisation, not a forecast. Observers at lower radiant altitude or under any light pollution will see substantially fewer meteors than the published ZHR suggests.

Other showers active near this peak

Source: Wikipedia (CC-BY-SA). Moon phase computed locally via astronomy-engine.