The shooting stars brighten up the nights of summer 2025. Like every year, the Perseids are back in the sky, to the delight of amateurs of astronomy and photographers. Here are the most splendid images of these meteors, seen this year.
If you should only admire an astronomical phenomenon in August 2025, they are them. The Perseids, a superb swarm of shooting stars, are back in the sky. Their peak of activity is imminent: it is planned this evening, on the night of Tuesday 12 to Wednesday August 13.
However, it is possible to see longer, because the swarm is generally active from mid-July to early September. This is all the more good news that this year, the Gibbous Moon does not facilitate the observation of the Perseids at the time of the maximum.
This content is blocked because you have not accepted cookies and other tracers. This content is provided by YouTube. To be able to visualize it, you must accept the use being operated by YouTube with your data which can be used for the following purposes: Allow yourself to view and share content with social media, promote the development and improvement of Humanoid and its partners, display personalized advertisements in relation to your profile and activity, you define a personalized advertising profile, measure the performance of advertising and content and measure the audience of this site (learn more)
By clicking on “I accept everything”, you consent to the aforementioned purposes for all cookies and other tracers deposited by Humanoid and its partners.
You keep the possibility of withdrawing your consent at any time. For more information, we invite you to learn about our cookies policy.
Manage my choices
Perseids in photos: the most beautiful images of the shooting stars of summer 2025
Moreover, many photographers did not wait for the maximum of the rain of shooting stars to immortalize them. Magnificent photos of the Perseids, in 2025, are already starting to be broadcast online.
A meteor of the Perseids on August 3, 2025, photographed from Virginia-Western. // Source: Flickr/CC/NASA/BILL Ingalls (cropped photo)
This content is blocked because you have not accepted cookies and other tracers. This content is provided by Instagram. To be able to visualize it, you must accept the use being operated by Instagram with your data which can be used for the following purposes: Allow yourself to view and share content with social media, promote the development and improvement of Humanoid and its partners, display personalized advertisements in relation to your profile and activity, you define a personalized advertising profile, measure the performance of ads and Measure the audience of this site (learn more)
By clicking on “I accept everything”, you consent to the aforementioned purposes for all cookies and other tracers deposited by Humanoid and its partners.
You keep the possibility of withdrawing your consent at any time. For more information, we invite you to learn about our cookies policy.
Manage my choices
Perseids are known worldwide for their shine, abundance and speed. According to NASA, around 50 to 100 meteors can be visible per hour. These meteors leave colorful light streaks in their wake, coming into contact with the atmosphere of the earth.
This content is blocked because you have not accepted cookies and other tracers. This content is provided by Twitter. To be able to visualize it, you must accept the use being operated by Twitter with your data which can be used for the following purposes: allow yourself to view and share content with social media, promote the development and improvement of Humanoid and its partners, display personalized advertisements compared to your profile and activity, you define a personalized advertising profile, measure the performance of advertising and content and measure the audience of this site (learn more)
By clicking on “I accept everything”, you consent to the aforementioned purposes for all cookies and other tracers deposited by Humanoid and its partners.
You keep the possibility of withdrawing your consent at any time. For more information, we invite you to learn about our cookies policy.
Manage my choices
This content is blocked because you have not accepted cookies and other tracers. This content is provided by Instagram. To be able to visualize it, you must accept the use being operated by Instagram with your data which can be used for the following purposes: Allow yourself to view and share content with social media, promote the development and improvement of Humanoid and its partners, display personalized advertisements in relation to your profile and activity, you define a personalized advertising profile, measure the performance of ads and Measure the audience of this site (learn more)
By clicking on “I accept everything”, you consent to the aforementioned purposes for all cookies and other tracers deposited by Humanoid and its partners.
You keep the possibility of withdrawing your consent at any time. For more information, we invite you to learn about our cookies policy.
Manage my choices
Perseids are all the more pleasant to admire since their maximum activity occurs during the summer. For observers and observers of the sky, it is therefore much more comfortable to spend the night outside them in the middle of winter – as with the shooting stars of the geminids, for example (however magnificent, too).
— Mary McIntyre @marymcintyreastro.bsky.social (@Spicey_Spiney) August 11, 2025
This content is blocked because you have not accepted cookies and other tracers. This content is provided by Twitter. To be able to visualize it, you must accept the use being operated by Twitter with your data which can be used for the following purposes: allow yourself to view and share content with social media, promote the development and improvement of Humanoid and its partners, display personalized advertisements compared to your profile and activity, you define a personalized advertising profile, measure the performance of advertising and content and measure the audience of this site (learn more)
By clicking on “I accept everything”, you consent to the aforementioned purposes for all cookies and other tracers deposited by Humanoid and its partners.
You keep the possibility of withdrawing your consent at any time. For more information, we invite you to learn about our cookies policy.
This content is blocked because you have not accepted cookies and other tracers. This content is provided by Bluesky Social. To be able to visualize it, you must accept the use being operated by Bluesky Social with your data which can be used for the following purposes: allowing yourself to view and share content with social media, promote the development and improvement of Humanoid and its partners, display personalized advertisements in relation to your profile and activity, you define a personalized advertising profile, site and measure the audience of this site (learn more)
By clicking on “I accept everything”, you consent to the aforementioned purposes for all cookies and other tracers deposited by Humanoid and its partners.
You keep the possibility of withdrawing your consent at any time. For more information, we invite you to learn about our cookies policy.
Manage my choices
The origin of the Perseids is a comet, 109p/Swift-Tuttle, discovered in 1862 by two astronomers (Lewis Swift and Horace Tuttle, which independently made its discovery). We know that it takes 133 years to this comet to take a tour of the sun, and that its nucleus is rather large – 26 km.
This comet produces a dusty streak, when it approaches the sun. It is these fragments that collide every year with the atmosphere of the earth, causing the superb shooting stars that we can then admire or, for the most skillful, photograph.
@numerama
Do you know where the tradition of making a wish come from when you see a shooting star? 🌠 Find our video on the most beautiful astronomical phenomenon of summer, the Perseids, on the YouTube channel of Numerama! 🎬 #etoiles #numerama #anecdote #Sciencetok #Sciencefacts #espace
♬ son original – Numerama – Numerama
This content is blocked because you have not accepted cookies and other tracers. This content is provided by Tiktok. To be able to visualize it, you must accept the use being operated by Tiktok with your data that can be used for the following purposes: allow yourself to view and share content with social media, promote the development and improvement of Humanoid and its partners, display personalized advertisements compared to your profile and activity, you define a personalized advertising profile, measure the performance of advertising and content and measure the audience of this site (learn more)
By clicking on “I accept everything”, you consent to the aforementioned purposes for all cookies and other tracers deposited by Humanoid and its partners.
You keep the possibility of withdrawing your consent at any time. For more information, we invite you to learn about our cookies policy.
Manage my choices
All tech news in the blink of an eye
Add Numerama to your home screen and stay connected to the future!