Meteor showers Since October 2010, Jenniskens has developed the global
Cameras for All-Sky Meteor Surveillance (CAMS) project to map our meteor showers. Meteor showers are detected by triangulating the path of meteors recorded in a low-light video camera surveillance of the night sky displayed at . Jenniskens is the principal investigator of NASA's Leonid Multi-Instrument Aircraft Campaign (Leonid MAC), a series of four airborne missions that fielded modern instrumental techniques to study the 1998 – 2002
Leonids meteor storms. These missions helped develop
meteor storm prediction models, detected the signature of
organic matter in the wake of
meteors as a potential precursor to origin-of-life chemistry, and discovered many new aspects of meteor radiation. More recent meteor shower missions include the Aurigid Multi-Instrument Aircraft Campaign (Aurigid MAC), which studied a rare September 1, 2007, outburst of
Aurigids from long-period comet
C/1911 N1 (Kiess), and the Quadrantid Multi-Instrument Aircraft Campaign (Quadrantid MAC), which studied the January 3, 2008,
Quadrantids. Jenniskens identified several important mechanisms of how our meteor showers originate. Since 2003, Jenniskens identified the
Quadrantids parent body , and several others, as new examples of how fragmenting comets are the dominant source of
meteor showers. These objects are now recognized as the main source of our
zodiacal dust cloud. Before that, he predicted and observed the 1995 Alpha Monocerotids meteor outburst (with members of the Dutch Meteor Society), proving that "stars fell like rain at midnight" because the dust trails of long-period
comets wander on occasion in Earth's path.
Spacecraft reentries His research also includes artificial meteors. Jenniskens is the principal investigator of NASA's
Genesis and
Stardust Entry Observing Campaigns to study the fiery return from interplanetary space of the
Genesis (September 2004),
Stardust (January 2006), and
Hayabusa (June 2010) sample return capsules. The beautiful reentry of JAXA's
Hayabusa probe over Australia on 13 June 2010 also included the disintegrating main spacecraft. These airborne missions studied what physical conditions the protective heat shield endured during the reentry before being recovered. More recently, Jenniskens led a mission to study the destructive entry of ESA's
Automated Transfer Vehicle Jules Verne on 29 September 2008, Orbital ATK's Cygnus OA6 reentry on 22 June 2016, and the spectacular daytime re-entry of space debris object
WT1190F near Sri-Lanka to practice a future observation of an impacting asteroid. == Small asteroid impacts and meteorite recovery ==