Posted on 01/06/2015 4:10:54 PM PST by Jack Hydrazine
Its being called the New Years Comet, a fuzzy green ball named Comet Lovejoy that is cruising past Mother Earth as we speak and is scheduled to become visible to the naked eye starting midweek.
The name Comet Lovejoy may ring a bell; one of its namesakes was last in Earths vicinity three years ago, when it survived a death plunge into the sun in 2011, then emerged to grow a new tail.
That was C/2011 W3 (Lovejoy). The latest entry into our field of vision is the fifth comet discovery for amateur astronomy Terry Lovejoy of Australia, according to Sky and Telescope, and its name is C/2014 Q2 (Lovejoy).
This one will not graze the sun, but Lovejoy Q2 is glowing green throughout January and could be visible to the naked eye starting Wednesday.
It has been brightening and can now be seen from latitudes in the Northern Hemisphere, as it moves toward its closest approach to Earth on January 7, 2015, says Earthsky.org. Then itll be 43.6 million miles away (70.2 million km). Soon, the comet will be high in Northern Hemisphere skies!
Just before Christmas this Lovejoy comet lost its tail as its 2011 predecessor did, growing another one that was also whipped away by a solar wind, according to Universe Today.
The best viewing begins just south of the constellation Orion, and unlike with the recent Quadrantid meteor shower, the moon is not interfering with this sight.
The comet enters its brightest two weeks on Wednesday, crossing Taurus and Aries higher and higher in early evening. It passes 8 degrees west-southwest of the Pleiades on the evening of January 17, Sky and Telescope reports. Although the comet begins to recede into the distance after the 7th, its intrinsic brightness should still be increasing a bit; it doesn't reach perihelion [closest approach to the sun] until January 30th.
It will not get terribly close to the sun, since it will be about 120 million miles from it (Earth is 93 million miles away), Sky and Telescope notes.
By that date the comet should finally be starting to fade slightly from Earth's point of view, and in late January the Moon returns; it's first-quarter on the 26th, Sky and Telescope says.
That said, a glimpse may require binoculars or a telescope, especially for those in well-lit areas, and all accounts say it is well worth the trouble. It boasts long majestic dust and ion tails, as well as the greenish hue characteristic of bright comets, according to a description by Universe Today, which along with Sky and Telescope gives detailed descriptions on how and where to see this stunner.
Its a once-in-a-lifetimemake that a once-in-several-millenniaopportunity to see this fellow traveler of the solar system, since Lovejoy will not return for 8,000 years.
Related threads:
Bright Comet Lovejoy Rings in the New Year! (Closest approach 7JAN2015)
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3242790/posts
Astronomy Picture of the Day — Comet Lovejoy before a Globular Star Cluster
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/3242428/posts
Astronomy Picture of the Day — This Comet Lovejoy
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/3240931/posts
Cool! Thanks!
Thanks for sharing.
bump for later after the clouds clear
So tomorrow night... Look to the right of the Orion Nebula...
Too bad it we’ll be having “Hoth” like temperatures with 40mph winds... (never fails)
Whenever there’s something I want to look at in the night skies, it seems to always be 4:30AM, cloudy, 100 below zero with tropical storm force winds, or sometimes all of the above.....
Saw it last week in almost full moonlight using 10x50 binoculars and a 4” refractor. Just a fuzzy blob. Hope we’ll be able to see the tail once the moon leaves the scene.
New Moon is 20JAN2015.
COMET LOVEJOY/NOW AT CLOSE APPROACH
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YwGmS4f8rv0
Closest approach to the Sun is 29JAN2015.
If you need help finding the stars and constellations you can download Stellarium for free.
I have my Stellarium running right now, I’ve found Orion but I’m not seeing anything representing Lovejoy.
You have to add it and here are the instructions on how to do that.
https://answers.launchpad.net/stellarium/+faq/1746
I tried it and it does work. I now have Lovejoy on my Stellarium!
You do realize I will need laser surgery to able to see it then.
Thanks.
How many reincarnations over 8,000 years? LOL!
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