Thursday, October 10, 2013

Comet C/2012 S1 (ISON)

28 Nov 2013 Grand Finale




05 Nov 2013




06 Oct 2013





29 Sept 2013



10 Feb 2013

The comet photographed here in the center of the image at the magnitude of +15 shows small tail. 
Located slightly about the orbit of Jupiter at a distance of 4 AU from Earth it is projected to become extremely bright in November. Let's hope it will!





12 Dec 2012
C/2012 S1 (ISON) is expected to become one of the greatest comets of this century. Discovered by Russian astronomers Vitaly Nevsky and Artem Novichonok on September 21, 2012 as 18th magnitude object, this comet is currently approximately +16.5m and is located above the ecliptic plane roughly as far as Jupiter from Sun . This image clearly shows its non-stellar appearance.





Wednesday, October 9, 2013

C/2011 L4 (PanSTARRS)

This comet discovered by PanSTARRS survey is expected to become a great magnitude 0 comet in Spring of 2013. Here I will try to follow it monthly and see how it brightens as it travels towards the Sun.
Here are the images on the discovery night (credit Credit: Henry Hsieh, PS1SC):



03/13/2013

And finally, Panstarrs is visible from my backyard!





06/23/2012

Although remotely controlled telescopes do an extremely good job, still there's nothing like capturing an image of a faint comet from your backyard! Here I used DSLR attached to my 8" SCT to capture the light of C/2011 L4 from my suburban home. It's not a pretty picture, but I had a lot of fun taking it, especially because there were not bright stars nearby and I don't have a go-to mount!



06/14/2012

Almost exactly a year since its discovery by PanSTARRS the comet is now moving between constellations of Scorpion and Libra and has reached magnitude 12. It is now 3.3 and 4.3AU away from the Earth and Sun respectively. It crossed the orbit of Jupiter in March and won't reach Mars orbit until January 2012. A small tail is clearly visible on stacked image.


Comet C/2011 L4 (PanSTARRS)


   CK11L040  C2012 06 14.22025 15 50 00.09 -25 47 03.2          14.6 N      857
   CK11L040  C2012 06 14.22882 15 49 59.45 -25 47 02.7          14.6 N      857
   CK11L040  C2012 06 14.23578 15 49 58.92 -25 47 02.1          14.6 N      857
   CK11L040  C2012 06 14.24109 15 49 58.52 -25 47 02.1          14.6 N      857
   CK11L040  C2012 06 14.24803 15 49 57.94 -25 47 01.4          14.6 N      857
   CK11L040  C2012 06 14.25266 15 49 57.63 -25 47 01.6          14.6 N      857

04/22/2012

Over the past few weeks the comet kept moving through dense star fields and crossed the border of the constellation Scorpius. Here it is easily seen as bright magnitude 15 object. The images were taken with 370mm Riegel telescope.





It is somewhere in here... (this one was actually taken with Takahashi Epsilon 250 the following night). The bright star is 25 Sco.




COD 857
OBS A. Kostin
MEA A. Kostin
TEL 0.37-m f/14 reflector + CCD
NET PPMXL
    CK11L040  C2012 04 22.40209 16 47 48.59 -25 19 10.0          15.4 N      857
    CK11L040  C2012 04 22.42293 16 47 47.71 -25 19 12.2          15.4 N      857
    CK11L040  C2012 04 22.44375 16 47 46.79 -25 19 14.3          15.4 N      857