One of the major annual meteor showers is tonight, 13th Dec 2004.
From a local astronomical site:
According to the International Meteor Organization (IMO), the Maximum of Geminids is 14th December 2004 06:20 HKT. Geminids is one of the finest annual showers presently observable. This year, new Moon on 12 December gives perfect observing conditions across the expected maximum on 13-14 December. The peak has shown slight signs of variability in its maximum rates and peak timing in recent years, with the six most reliably observed maxima over the past 15 years having all occurred within 2h 20m of the time above.
<img src="http://science.nasa.gov/images/geminidsradiant.gif" width=549 height=293 vspace=3 align=left> The Geminid radiant (where the meteors appear to radiate from)<br>
<a href="http://science.nasa.gov/newhome/headlines/ast04dec98_1.htm">NASA</a><P>So if the sky is clear, after midnight find some high ground away from lights and look towards Gemini (which is why they're called Geminids).
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