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Night vision
← TONIGHTPittsburgh, PA · Aug 12–13, 2026

METEOR SHOWER · PEAK AUG 12–13, 2026

Up to 88 meteors an hour over Pittsburgh — and zero moonlight.

The Perseid meteor shower peaks over Pittsburgh on the night of August 12–13, 2026, under a new moon at 0% illumination: zero moonlight all night. True darkness runs 10:05 PM to 4:45 AM; the radiant climbs to 62° by 4:45 AM, good for up to 88 meteors per hour under truly dark skies.

DARK FROM
10:05 PM
DARK UNTIL
4:45 AM
RADIANT AT BEST
62° · NE
MOON
0% · new
CLOUD COVER
~July 27

THE RADIANT, HOUR BY HOUR

Higher radiant, more meteors — the pre-dawn hours win.

LOCAL TIMERADIANT ALTITUDEDIRECTION
11 PM20°NNE
12 AM26°NE
1 AM33°NE
2 AM40°NE
3 AM48°NE
4 AM56°NE

HOW TO ACTUALLY SEE THEM

  • Go after midnight; 2–5 AM is the prime window.Pittsburgh turns your side of Earth into the shower's windshield in the small hours.
  • Leave the phone in your pocket for 20 minutes.Night vision takes that long to build, and one glance at a screen resets it to zero.
  • No equipment. Eyes only — telescopes and binoculars see too little sky. A reclining chair and a blanket beat any optics.

SKY DARKNESS

Bortle 8
Pristine darkInner city

Bright city sky — expect the Moon, planets, and the brightest stars; faint objects need a trip out of town. Meteors reward darkness more than any other sky sight: a 30–60 minute drive away from the city glow improves the sky by a class or two and multiplies what you'll count.

SAME DAY

The same new Moon, twelve hours earlier

That same afternoon, the Moon takes a bite out of the Sun: 2.9% covered from Pittsburgh at 1:44 PM. Same Moon, same day — that's why the night is moonless.

Same night, an eclipse in the afternoon →

Common questions

When exactly should I watch?

Rates build after midnight and are best between 2 and 5 AM. True darkness in Pittsburgh runs from 10:05 PM to 4:45 AM that night, and the radiant is highest (62°) around 4:45 AM — the last dark hour is the strongest.

Where in the sky should I look?

Nowhere in particular — Perseids streak across the whole sky. Their radiant sits in the northeast in Perseus, 62° up at its best, and meteors look longest about 45° away from it. Lie back and take in as much sky as you can.

Is Pittsburgh dark enough?

Pittsburgh's city-center sky is roughly Bortle 8 (city sky), so expect a fraction of the dark-sky rate downtown. Bright city sky — expect the Moon, planets, and the brightest stars; faint objects need a trip out of town. A 30–60 minute drive away from the city glow improves the sky by a class or two and multiplies the meteors you'll count.

Will clouds block it?

Hourly cloud forecasts reach only about 16 days out, so Pittsburgh's forecast for the night of August 12–13, 2026 opens around July 27. This page picks it up automatically the moment it exists — check back then.