- What is the Lyrid Meteor Shower - and will it be visible in London? The Standard —
- Met Office verdict on chances of seeing Lyrid meteor shower over Greater Manchester tonight Manchester Evening News —
- Lyrids meteor shower peaking TONIGHT with up to 100 per hour - best place to see stunning show Mirror —
- World's oldest meteor shower to be visible in UK skies tonight The National —
- What do the Lyrids look like from space? Astronaut captures view USA Today —
- How to see the Lyrid meteor shower above Greater Manchester tonight Manchester Evening News —
- Lyrid meteor shower: How to spot the celestial show - and what will the weather be like? Sky News —
- Spectacular photos of the 2026 Lyrid meteor shower captured from Earth and space Space.com —
- How to see the Lyrid meteor shower in the UK as it peaks today Metro —
- Lyrid meteor shower 2026: how to see the peak tonight— from the US and UK The Times —
- Lyrid meteor showers: UK skies set for fireball-heavy night sky spectacle tonight; visibility and peak viewing time revealed Times Of India —
- Lyrid meteor shower: How to watch tonight's 'shooting stars' peak Belfast Live —
Jessica Meir
Swedish-American marine biologist and astronaut
Jessica Ulrika Meir is a Swedish and American marine biologist, physiologist, and NASA astronaut. She was previously an assistant professor of anesthesia at Harvard Medical School, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, following postdoctoral research in comparative physiology at the University of British Columbia. She has studied the diving physiology and behavior of emperor penguins in Antarctica, and the physiology of bar-headed geese, which are able to migrate over the Himalayas. In September 2002, Meir served as an aquanaut on the NASA Extreme Environment Mission Operations 4 crew. In 2013, she was selected by NASA to Astronaut Group 21. In 2016, Meir participated in ESA CAVES, a training course in which international astronauts train in a space-analogue cave environment. Meir launched on September 25, 2019, to the ISS onboard Soyuz MS-15, where she served as a flight engineer during Expedition 61 and 62. On October 18, 2019, Meir and Christina Koch were the first women to participate in an all-female spacewalk.
Also known as...
Jessica Ulrika Meir