Kappa Cygnids


Kappa Cygnids, abbreviated KCG and IAU shower number 12, was an episodic meteor shower that took place from June to September, peaking around August 13, along with the larger Perseids meteor shower. The radiant of the shower emerged from the antihelion source in late June and moves upwards to Cygnus in July. In early August, the radiant is just west of the star Vega and elongated in a north-south direction. The shower then turns a corner and moves to the east in late August. The Kappa Cygnids are named for the position of the radiant at the peak of the shower, where the meteor shower will appear to line up in sky by the constellation Cygnus and the star Kappa Cygni.
The Kappa Cygnids are unusual in that they are absent in most years, but appear every 7 years. The years 2020 and 2021 fit in that sequence. The shower is known for occasional bright fireballs with multiple flares.
The minor planet 2008 ED69 has the appropriate orbital parameters to explain the Kappa Cygnids shower. As the meteor stream has more combined mass than 2008 ED69, the two may have originated during the fragmentation of a parent body. The observed dispersion of the stream suggests this breakup occurred some time around 4000-1600 BC. The stream passes close to the planet Venus and hence may cause a significant meteor shower on that body.
YearActive BetweenPeak of showerZHR
1879June - SeptemberAugust 133
1893June - SeptemberAugust 133
1950June - SeptemberAugust 133
1957June - SeptemberAugust 133
1978June - SeptemberAugust 133
1985June - SeptemberAugust 133
1993June - SeptemberAugust 133
1999June - SeptemberAugust 133
2007June - SeptemberAugust 133
2013June - SeptemberAugust 133
2014June - SeptemberAugust 133
2020June - SeptemberAugust 133
2021June - SeptemberAugust 133