Updated
Updated · spacedaily.com · Jun 22
IMO Sees No 2026 June Bootids Outburst as Peak Falls on June 22
Updated
Updated · spacedaily.com · Jun 22

IMO Sees No 2026 June Bootids Outburst as Peak Falls on June 22

3 articles · Updated · spacedaily.com · Jun 22

Summary

  • The International Meteor Organization's 2026 calendar flags only a weak June 22 maximum for the June Bootids, with no unusual activity forecast during the June 22-July 2 run.
  • Current models show the dust trails behind the shower's rare 1998 and 2004 outbursts are not in Earth's path this year, undercutting claims of a repeat 100-meteor display.
  • The shower remains one of the calendar's most erratic—usually near zero, occasionally above 100 an hour in ideal ZHR terms—with slow meteors entering at about 18 kilometers per second.
  • Northern observers can still watch around the peak and adjacent nights, but solstice twilight, light pollution and the difference between ZHR and real-world counts make sparse activity the likeliest outcome.

Insights

Why do the June Bootids defy prediction while other meteor showers arrive like clockwork each year?
Will August's rare solar eclipse and powerful Perseid shower be 2026's real celestial show?