2010 August 16 
  
Meteors streaked through the sky above many of Earth's  cities last week, but nobody was hurt, and no damage has been reported. The assault from space  appeared to originate from someplace in the constellation of Perseus, and  included millions of small projectiles hurtling  toward Earth at over 200,000 kilometers per hour. Pictured above, people  gathered at ASTROLab du  Mont-Megantic in southern Quebec, Canada gazed helplessly toward  the sky during a similar event last year as they themselves were unable to stop  the meteor onslaughts.  Fortunately, Earth's defense,  consisting of a planet-wide blanket of air  over 100-kilometers thick, obliterated the attacking  projectiles by using friction generated by their own speed to heat them into  disintegration. The large triangle in the  foreground, although impressive in appearance, was not part of the Earth's  meteor defense system. The space attack was expected  as part of the annual Perseids meteor  shower as the Earth passed through sand-sized debris left over from the  sun-orbiting Comet Swift-Tuttle.
reference: http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap100816.html
 
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