One last look at NEOWISE – On the 101

By Rob and Georgina May

Passionate about Mercury, Rob May is known to always be on the hunt for Comets, cars that is. NEOWISE, an astronomical type of Comet, joined Mercury (the planet) in our solar system during the month of July 2020. Georgina Garcia May Photography provides us a glimpse of the lonely shy Comet that will not return for another 6,766 years following its orbital ellipse.Photographers made several stops On the 101 for a chance to see this rare galactic event.

Halleys Comet (last seen in 1986) is one of the most famous and well known comets. Its relative short-term repeat cycle and brightness highlight its popularity. In 1997, the Hale-Bopp Comet made its appearance. It too was luminescent; however, with an over 2500 year cycle, its return is for another era.NEOWISE is the brightest comet in the northern hemisphere since HaleBopp. An acronym with an acronym, Near-Earth Object (NEO) combining with Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) forms the name NEOWISE.

Launched from Vandenberg Air Force Base (VAFB) in December 2009, a Delta II rocket successfully placed the WISE telescope into orbit. It no longer will be in the shadow of its bigger brother Hubble. In addition to comet NEOWISE, numerous other less visible comets, asteroids, stars, and planets were discovered by the WISE telescope.

Back on Earth, multiple challenges hampered our NEOWISE sightings. Weather, from overcast skies to fog, are the obvious roadblocks in the skyways. Smoke from fires and general smog haze also hindered the comets performance on the astral stage.Ironically, clear nights with a bright moon are not optimal either due to its light outshining the comets appearance.In the same dilemma, popular places are not the best especially with headlights from others shining in camera lens.Remote locations were the most productive.

Speaking of location, simply locating the comet among the stars, planets, satellites, and streaking meteors was not so simple. The Big Dipper was the main reference point after dark. Each night, the comets location and brightness varied.The best time for viewing with the naked eye, binoculars, cameras, telescopes, and more was an hour after sunset. (Initial sightings were possible just before sunrise too). Information providing guides on the expected comets path included online websites and phone apps, quality varied.

Canon is the camera of choice for this writing and photography team. Sturdy tripods are mandatory. On some nights, no extras were needed to see the comet, although binoculars were best for the initial capture to verify ones eyes. Thirty-second long exposure is key to capturing the photo. Settings had to be adjusted to compensate for the dark and limited light (while at the same time not oversaturating). Color and black/white pictures allow for varying details and effects. Georgina Garcia May perfected her night photography on multiple scenes on the 101 and West Coast from Lompoc to Morro Bay and inland to the Carrizo Plains. From our backyard in Lompoc, Surf Beach, Buellton, and Los Alamos, all were locations for photographing the NEOWISE Comet.

Looking for the perfect backdrop for your night shots? The Milky Way (not the candy bar) is great for regular and panoramic views.While not always compatible with comet pictures, the Moon is a fantastic model on its own accord. Planets aligning into a Great Conjunction is a site to behold as well. Also not to be missed, is any solar eclipse from partial to totality. Of course, night rocket launches remain photogenic too.

The rest is here:

One last look at NEOWISE - On the 101

Accolades: Fundraising Efforts, Comet Sports Teams Garner Recognition – University of Texas at Dallas

Accolades is an occasional News Center feature that highlights recent accomplishments of The University of Texas at Dallas faculty and students. To submit items for consideration, contact your schools communication manager.

Fundraising Program Earns CASE Award

UT Dallas has been honored with a 2020 Educational Fundraising Award from the Council for Advancement and Support of Education (CASE).

The Universitys fundraising has helped transform the campus, including the addition of the Engineering and Computer Science West building.

The University earned this distinction in the category of Overall Improvement among public research/doctoral institutions with endowments over $215 million. The award recognizes significant achievement by university fundraising efforts over the past three years by measuring growth in total university support, alumni-giving participation and impact on key areas such as endowment, current operations and capital projects.

Our talented and dedicated staff works hard every day to create a culture of philanthropy in our community, said Kyle Edgington PhD13, vice president for development and alumni relations. This award is a testament to their accomplishments. I am grateful that University leadership continues to invest in our efforts. Of course, everything we do is made possible by the generosity of our loyal alumni, donors and friends.

Since 2017 UTDallas has added nearly 200 funds to its endowment, increasing its market value from $483 million to a high of $574 million. During this time, the University has continued to set record numbers for alumni participation and total gifts raised each year, realizing a 78% increase in annual donations from 2017 to 2019.

This fundraising success has made a transformative impact around campus. Highlights include theacquisition of world-renowned collections of art, the construction of new buildings such as theEngineering and Computer Science West, new awards to promote the research ofearly career faculty,record-setting scholarship endowments and a recent effort toaid students during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Talented students, staff and faculty are the face of every great university, said UTDallas President Richard C. Benson, the Eugene McDermott Distinguished University Chair of Leadership. The work they do inspires alumni and partners to support the aspirations of our students, groundbreaking research, life-changing clinical care and creative expression.

Womens Golf Team Wins Academic National Title

Boasting a team GPA of 3.86 over the 2019-20 academic year, the womens golf team has for the first time been crowned the Academic National Champion of NCAA Division III by the Womens Golf Coaches Association (WGCA).

From left: Comet golfers Karen Alvarez, Marissa Langer, Lindy Patterson and Michelle Edgar.

Seniors Michelle Edgar, Marissa Langer and Lindy Patterson and sophomore Karen Alvarez also were honored as All-American Scholars by the WGCA. The womens golf team was not the only UT Dallas sports program that collected major academic accolades over the summer.

The mens golf team received the Presidents Special Recognition Honor for the fifth consecutive year from the Golf Coaches Association of America (GCAA). Only teams with a GPA at 3.5 and higher collected the honor. Three Comets Harrison Hicks BS20, graduate student Jacob Rockefeller and junior Joseph Park also were recognized as All-America Scholars by the GCAA. Hicks also was named Academic All-American by the College Sports Information Directors of America after closing his career with a perfect 4.0 GPA.

The volleyball team earned the Team Academic Award from the United States Marine Corps/American Volleyball Coaches Association, and five members of the mens basketball program were named to the Honors Court by the National Association of Basketball Coaches. For the 2019-20 academic year, UT Dallas placed 112 student-athletes on the American Southwest Conference (ASC) Academic All-Conference Teams with six Comets named the ASCs Distinguished Scholar-Athlete for their respective sport.

See original here:

Accolades: Fundraising Efforts, Comet Sports Teams Garner Recognition - University of Texas at Dallas

Perseid Meteor Shower will peak over UK on August 11 and 12 – Newbury Weekly News Group

THE Perseid meteor shower is an annual even which starts in mid-July, but reaches its peak on the night of August 11 and morning of the 12, when it should put on quite a show.

If you look anywhere in the lower part of the sky towards the north after it gets dark you might be able to see meteors every few minutes - weather permitting!At peak there could be on average 100 meteors per hour, with up to 75 meteors an hour or more visible from a dark site.

The best time to start looking for meteors is later in the evening until dawn. Perseid rates will increase leading up to peak night when there will be a sudden increase in the rate of showers. The spectacular shower show will continue for a couple of nights before gradually receding.

Tony Hersh, from Newbury Astronomical Society explains: "As comets heat up near the Sun, ice inside them turns to gas and bubbles off the surface, taking dust and rubble with it.The particles of dust and rubble stay drifting in space, but if the Earth travels through them on our path round the Sun they heat up in our atmosphere, glowing white hot as they disintegrate and they appear as streaks of light across the sky.

"The comet that causes the Perseid meteors is dust and rubble left behind as the Swift-Tuttle comet approached the Sun in 1862."

How to spot a meteor:

Wrap up warm and lie back in a reclining chair or on the ground, try and keep clear of trees, lights and buildings. Get your eyes accustomed to the night sky and then just watch. Meteors can come from any direction and blink and you might miss them, but if you spot one it will be a bright streak flashing across the sky, either on its own or a group of them.

Good luck - and if you manage to capture the Perseid meteor shower on camera, email your images to geraldine.gardner@newburynews.co.uk

See the original post here:

Perseid Meteor Shower will peak over UK on August 11 and 12 - Newbury Weekly News Group

Night Sky: The Neowise Comet, the Perseids Meteor Shower, and other Highlights for August – Island Free Press

Hopefully You Got a Chance to See Neowise!

During July, we got a rare, close visit from the comet Neowise. Neowise came within 64 million miles of Earth on July 23. This picture was taken on July 21, using my 5 telescope. But you didnt need a telescope to see this beauty. At its brightest point in early July, you could easily see it with the naked eye. My brother-in-law in Utah went camping in the Uintah Mountains last weekend, and got spectacular views of Neowise.

If you missed Neowise, you can still view it as it pulls away from Earth. On August 1, Neowise will be located about 30 above the WNW horizon at 10:00 p.m. With a visual magnitude of +5.9, you will probably need binoculars to see it. Neowise will continue to show up in the west for the next week or two, growing dimmer every night. But try looking for it on August 8, and with a little luck you might be able to see another comet, Panstarrs at the same time. The two comets will appear about 22 above the western horizon at 10 p.m. Neither comet will be visible with the naked eye. Neowise will be the brighter of the two, with a visual magnitude of +7.8. Panstarrs is much fainter, with a visual magnitude of +10, but you might be able to see it with very good binoculars.

What you can look for in Augusts Night Skies

Venus is still doing a great job as the Morning Star! On August 1, it will rise at 2:55 a.m. With a visual magnitude of -4.4, you wont confuse it with anything else. Mercury is also visible in the morning skies. Mercury has a magnitude of -0.8, so you might get it confused with the Gemini Twins, Castor and Pollux, which also appear in the early morning eastern skies. Castor, the upper twin, rises just after 4:00 a.m., and Pollux rises half an hour later. Mercury rises at 4:55 a.m., so it lags behind the twins, but it is substantially brighter.

The evening skies still feature Jupiter, Saturn and Mars. On August 1, both Jupiter and Saturn rise before the sun sets. Jupiter will appear to ride the nearly full moon across the sky, while Saturn lags slightly behind. Mars rises at 11:18 p.m.

As a reminder, you still might be able to see comet Neowise with the naked eye on August 1. At this point in time, it will have a visual magnitude of +6.1. That means you will need really good eyes and a very clear night. Having a good a pair of binoculars handy is a good idea. At 9:00 p.m. on August 1, the comet will be about 35 degrees above the Western horizon.

The Perseids meteor shower peaks on August 12. This is a major meteor shower featuring up to 100 meteors per hour. The Perseids have been known produce a few fireballs, too. The best time to view this meteor shower is around 4:00 a.m. But, the Perseids are above the horizon all night long throughout August. So you can look for them anytime you have a clear, dark sky. They are easy to find too; simply look to the ENE after sundown. On August 12,, the Perseids will start the night very close to the ENE horizon, but as the night passes, they will arc across the sky and be about 60 above the horizon at their peak.

Moon Phases:1st Quarter is August 25Full Moon is August 3Last Quarter is August 11New Moon is August 18

Read more here:

Night Sky: The Neowise Comet, the Perseids Meteor Shower, and other Highlights for August - Island Free Press

Astronomer Maria Mitchell Discovered A Comet And Fought The Gender Pay Gap – Forbes

Maria Mitchell was the third of 10 children.

Astronomer Maria Mitchell discovered a new comet in the night sky over Nantucket on October 1, 1847. Over the next few nights, a handful of other observers around the world spotted the same celestial visitor, but Mitchell had been the first. She published her findings in January 1848; a month later, she followed up with her calculations describing the length and period of the comets orbit. Today, comet C/1847 T1 is nicknamed Miss Mitchells Comet, and the discovery gained Maria Mitchell a place among the stars of astronomy.

Born on August 1, 1818, Mitchell was the daughter of a librarian and a teacher with surprisingly egalitarian ideas about educating their daughters. Mitchell grew up helping her father, an amateur astronomer, with his observations and calculations. By her teenage years, she could operate a chronometer, a sextant, and several kinds of telescope; she could predict the timing of a solar eclipse or figure precise latitude and longitude based on the positions of the stars and planets.

Mitchell spent most of her young adulthood teaching, first as her fathers assistant and later at a private school she founded which caused a stir by being racially integrated at a time when even the abolition of American slavery was still considered a radical position. But the 1847 discovery of Miss Mitchells comet eventually put her on a new trajectory as a professional astronomer.

She received a flurry of recognition and publicity for her discovery, ranging from an 1849 gold medal from the King of Denmark (whose predecessor had, back in 1831, promised a gold medal to anyone who discovered a new comet) and recognition at the first womens rights conference in Seneca Falls, NY in July 1848, to wordwide newspaper headlines and visits from leading scholars and thinkers of the mid-1800s. The very public addition to her astronomical resume probably helped Mitchell land a job with the U.S. Coast Survey (still in business as the National Geodetic Survey, under NOAA) in 1849; the Survey was putting together navigational tables with the positions of stars and planets in different places at certain times, and it was Mitchells job to do the calculations.

And in 1865, she became a professor of astronomy and director of the observatory at the newly-founded Vassar College in New York. Few years later, she and a colleague fought and won a protracted battle with the Colleges administration for equal pay. Mitchell and her female colleague discovered in 1871 that they were being paid slightly less than half the annual salary of their male counterparts; even when they factored in the cost of housing provided by the College, the female professors were still coming up short. The lady professors refused to back down and were eventually granted equal pay and benefits.

Mitchell taught astronomy and studied the night sky at Vassar College until 1888, about a year before her death. She was also a lifelong advocate for womens suffrage and for the abolition of slavery.

See the article here:

Astronomer Maria Mitchell Discovered A Comet And Fought The Gender Pay Gap - Forbes

OPINION EXCHANGE | Comets may be heralds of hard times, but also of revival – Minneapolis Star Tribune

On July 14 I needed a first-rate northern horizon.

Comet C/2020 F3 Neowise would be gleaming low in the north-northwest an hour after sunset, rotating with the celestial sphere and out of view not long after. Id seen raves online (Do not miss this!). And besides, hunting comets has been a keen subset of my astronomy hobby for decades.

Six weeks earlier, after several late-night and predawn forays beginning in late March, Id finally spotted a different comet, C/2017 T2. It manifested as a small, dim patch of fuzz in my 15x70 binoculars, not even remotely apparent to the unaided eye a species of quarry only zealots could savor, and a typical cometary experience.

But I was assured that Neowise was special. Shining at fourth magnitude it was easily a naked-eye object, brighter than many of the stars visible in a rural sky.

The day was partly cloudy, but a glance at the weather forecast (and a barometer) indicated a clear night. Not taking any chances, I scaled the 100-feet-tall Side Lake fire tower at dusk. Cant procure a much better panorama than that.

When I reached the cupola and faced north, I groaned. A last bridgehead of cloud was draped along the north-northwest horizon. The gray mass, fringed with fading orange, hovered in precisely the wrong spot. Had the privilege of the tower been neutralized?

At 10:05 p.m. I began scanning with the formidable glass of the 15x70s. I stalked just above the treacherous band of cloud. Nothing. Anyone whos searched for comets has known disappointment. Many recall the hype (entire books were written) preceding the return of Halleys famous comet in 1986. It didnt fizzle exactly, but never approached the splendor that astounded the world in 1910, when it spanned most of the sky, was visible during the day, and inspired apocalyptic fever dreams. The earth passed through Halleys tail and farm families retreated into tornado shelters, frightened by claims the cometary gas could poison our planet.

Searching for Neowise, I spent 20 minutes periodically gridding the north-northwest horizon side-to-side, up and down, taking breaks to admire Jupiter and Saturn rising in the southeast, and noting familiar stars and constellations snapping into view with last light fading.

As darkness develops, objects leap into visibility. A threshold is attained for any given brightness, and what is imperceptible one moment is suddenly revealed a second later.

At 10:27 p.m., the comet in full glory materialized in the lenses, 5 degrees above the clouds. I whooped. The hype was redeemed.

The coma, or head, was intensely luminous; the tail fanned out in a gentle arc, the pressure and heat of mere sunlight fashioning a feather of star dust saturating my field of view. The impression was of a hot, blazing rocket, but comets sustain the icy cold of deep space. Even so, the frozen primordial matter being peeled away by solar wind looked like the pure white product of a forge.

For the next half-hour I relished the rarity, and the surprise. We average only one prominent comet per decade. Unlike Halley and other short-period comets, Neowise blew in from nowhere, calculated to be on a 6,800-year orbit around the sun, last visiting our neighborhood at the dawn of human civilization. Nobody wrote it down.

Just after 11 p.m. I eased down the 126 steps of the fire tower, then paused on the center-line of County Road 5 and looked north. Naked-eye, the comet was a white slash bracketed by tall pine forest on either side of the road. It was a beckoning tableau, as if the pavement steered for the sky through a tunnel of trees and the comet was within reach.

I stood transfixed. Sure, I was glad for the tower, and certainly appreciative of the lenses, but there on the highway I enjoyed the most compelling phase of the spectacle, when the celestial traveler seemed linked to earth.

The reputation of comets as harbingers of doom or revival, explicitly connected to human events, is well known. Who isnt drawn to portents and omens? We understand that comets are essentially dirty snowballs composed of rocky ice and dust, and relatively insubstantial. Indeed, the National Geographic Society once described them as the nearest thing to nothing that anything can be and still be something.

And yet, when I heard of the unexpected arrival of a bright comet my first thought was: of course, its 2020. We are mired in a baneful pandemic unlike anything endured for a century, parsing our lives into 14-day increments of health and survival or not. As of this writing, 150,000 Americans have died, with no end immediately apparent. Against this sobering backdrop, were suffering domestic unrest over racial injustice, the global economy is severely strained, tensions between the United States and China are escalating, and our looming November election is seen by many left and right as an existential, do-or-die moment of truth.

All these challenges (and more) demand attention, action but we cannot be always on red alert, at the barricades, hypervigilant, hypersensitive. We must also play and dream. Otherwise well sooner or later collapse into a bitter vortex of angst and be of little use to anyone. The first rule for all is do no harm, and that includes to ourselves. No one contributes by crashing and burning.

Seeking and witnessing the comet was an intentional, joyous frolic. Its beauty was inspiriting (and bipartisan) and though Im familiar with the physics I also enjoyed an indulgent flight of fancy. I thought, why do I feel so uplifted? What is the message of this comet? Im capable of ascribing meaning if I choose, so what does Neowise mean?

I choose revival. Listen: the comet is a herald of magnificent transformation. I allowed the view of Neowise from the center-line of County Road 5 to assure me that we have a clear route to a metaphorical heaven. The comet beckons to a loftier plane, to acknowledge and celebrate what Abraham Lincoln called the better angels of our nature.

They are often evoked in play, when we set aside the axes were grinding and revisit the wonder, optimism, and uninhibited rumpus of childhood. Mark Twain, whose birth and death were bracketed by Halleys comet, wrote, When Im playful I use the meridians of longitude and the parallels of latitude for a seine, and drag the Atlantic Ocean for whales. I scratch my head with the lightning and purr myself to sleep with the thunder.

Prose poetry of a high order, and resonant with rejuvenating gladness and useful whimsy. Its a mind-set we call recreation. Such imagining can keep us in touch with sanity.

So, washed in starlight on a mild summer evening, I passed through the looking glasses. I strode the highway between the pines to the comet, and straddling the shimmering tail I rode it toward the sun and a dazzling tomorrow. Popping into view just ahead I saw John Muir, that tough and intrepid wanderer of wilderness. He called out, All things move in music and write it. The mouse, lizard, and grasshopper sing together on the Turlock sands, sing with the morning stars.

Why not? Its my choice, my portent. Ill get back to work in the morning.

Peter M. Leschak, of Side Lake, Minn., is the author of Ghosts of the Fireground and other books.

Go here to read the rest:

OPINION EXCHANGE | Comets may be heralds of hard times, but also of revival - Minneapolis Star Tribune

How to spot Comet NEOWISE before it disappears for thousands of years – PBS NewsHour

Theres still a little bit of time to catch a glimpse of a newly discovered comet as it blazes across the night sky, especially if you have binoculars or a telescope handy.

C/2020 F3 NEOWISE, also called Comet NEOWISE, was first spotted in late March of this year by NASAs Near-Earth Object Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (NEOWISE) mission. According to NASA, the comets nucleus is about 3 miles in diameter and composed of dust, rock and frozen gases left over from the birth of our solar system around 4.6 billion years ago.

When comets near our sun, the increasing heat creates a coma, or a kind of atmosphere composed of particles and gases that surrounds the nucleus. A combination of solar wind and the pressure of sunlight can blow some of that atmosphere away from the comet, forming two tails one made of ions, and another made of dust that can extend in the opposite direction of the sun for millions of miles. Imaging suggests that Comet NEOWISE could potentially have two ion tails, as well as its dust tail.

Graphic courtesy of NASASpacePlace via Wikimedia Commons.

Joseph Masiero, who serves as NEOWISE deputy principal investigator at NASAs Jet Propulsion Laboratory, said that spotting Comet NEOWISE was exhilarating, particularly given how rare it is for comets that are visible to the naked eye to pass by our planet.

These kinds of celestial events really help remind me how big and wonderful the universe is, and how fortunate I am to get to explore it in these difficult times.

Im pretty sure every astronomer surveying the sky has a secret hope to find the next naked-eye comet, so I feel like our team won the lottery on this, Masiero said. These kinds of celestial events really help remind me how big and wonderful the universe is, and how fortunate I am to get to explore it in these difficult times.

Comet NEOWISE made its closest approach to Earth on July 22 and has grown dimmer and dimmer as it heads back toward the outer reaches of our solar system. But if you want to try your luck over the next few days, find a patch of sky with a minimal amount of light pollution where your view wont be obstructed by trees or buildings.

This graphic marks Comet NEOWISEs trajectory over the next few nights from the perspective of someone stargazing in the Northern Hemisphere. Megan McGrew/PBS NewsHour

Then look to the northwestern sky below and just a bit west of the Big Dipper the comet will be climbing higher above the horizon as the nights wear on. You can also use the Comet NEOWISE app to help you figure out exactly where to look for the comet from your location.

Although you may still be able to spot Comet NEOWISE with your naked eye, a pair of binoculars or a telescope should give you a clearer view. The publication EarthSky also recommends using a high quality camera that can capture the comet with an extended exposure.

If you miss the show this time around, youll just have to wait another 6,800 years or so for Comet NEOWISE to make its way back to Earth.

Comet NEOWISE, also known as C/2020 F3, is seen on July 18, 2020 in Joshua Tree, California. Photo by Daniel Knighton/Getty Images

Read more from the original source:

How to spot Comet NEOWISE before it disappears for thousands of years - PBS NewsHour

Comet of the Week: 67P/Churyomov-Gerasimenko – RocketSTEM

A sketch I made of Comet 67Ps visual appearance through a 20-cm telescope on December 24, 1982.Perihelion: 2015 August 13.08, q = 1.243 AU

There have been a handful of occasions throughout recent history when someone has discovered a comet while looking for, or examining, another one. Such an incident happened in late 1969 in the former Soviet Union, when on September 11 Svetlana Gerasimenko with the Alma Ata Observatory (in what is present-day Kazakhstan) took photographs of Comet 32P/Comas Sola. Klim Churyumov, then with the Kiev Observatory, performed the astrometric measurements of what he believed was that comet, but a month later realized that the positions were far off. Upon re-examining the photographs he found that he had in fact measured a previously-unknown comet that was some two magnitudes brighter than Comet Comas Sola (that was also on the photographs).

The newly-discovered Comet Churyumov-Gerasimenko was found to have an approximate orbital period of 6.6 years. It has been recovered on every return since then, and during the 1982 return, which took place under very favorable viewing geometry, it reached 9th magnitude and I was able to detect it with binoculars. It also exhibited a distinct dust tail which on one occasion I measured as being 20 arcminutes long visually.

Comet 67P achieved fame in the mid-2000s when it was selected as the destination for ESAs ambitious Rosetta mission. Rosetta had originally been scheduled for launch in January 2003 with its destination being Comet 46P/Wirtanen, however a failure of the Ariane 5 launch rocket a month earlier grounded all flights of that vehicle until the necessary failure analysis could be conducted. Comet 67P was accordingly chosen as the new destination.

Rosetta was successfully launched from Kourou, French Guiana on March 2, 2004. Over the next 5 years it performed three gravity-assist flybys of Earth as well as a very close gravity-assist flyby of Mars, and as discussed in a previous Special Topics presentation it also performed flybys of the main-belt asteroid (2867) Steins in September 2008 and the larger main-belt asteroid (21) Lutetia in July 2010. Not too long after the Lutetia encounter Rosetta was placed in a state of hibernation, from which it was awoken in January 2014. From there it made its final approach to Comet 67P, arriving there on August 6 of that year, and after various maneuvers, it successfully entered orbit around the comets nucleus a month later.

The approach photographs showed that the comets nucleus is made up of two discrete hemispheres, one distinctly larger than the other, making it a contact binary similar to several of the near-Earth asteroids that have been successfully radar-imaged (and also the Kuiper Belt object (486958) Arrokoth that was visited by the New Horizons mission at the beginning of 2019). The evidence that has been collected suggests that the two hemispheres were at one time two separate objects that collided and stuck together a long time ago and based upon the various other objects that exhibit such a structure it would appear that this is a relatively common occurrence amongst the small bodies of our solar system.

At the time of Rosettas arrival, Comet 67P was a full year away from perihelion passage, and the overall rationale for the mission was to examine the comet as it approached perihelion and became active, and then as it began to shut down as it receded from perihelion. With an onboard complement of eleven scientific instruments Rosetta was able to conduct numerous scientific studies throughout that time, and among its findings were numerous organic compounds, including four for the first time (one of these being acetone), a deuterium-to-hydrogen ratio in its water that is three times higher than that in Earths seawater the significance of these findings being part of the subject of a future Special Topics presentation large amounts of free oxygen (which was quite unexpected), a lack of a magnetic field, and the appearances of numerous sinkholes and the crumbling of cliffs as the comets activity proceeded.

Rosetta also carried a separate probe, Philae, that was designed to soft-land upon the comets nucleus. Rosetta released Philae on November 12, 2014, for a seven-hour descent to the comets surface, but unfortunately, the planned anchoring system failed and Philae bounced twice before coming to rest, apparently on its side in a hole next to some high cliffs. It was nevertheless able to carry out various scientific observations during the 60 hours before its battery power ran out, and while the cliffs were apparently made of a rather porous material, Philaes drilling hammer broke after a few minutes, indicating that the ground underneath it was very hard, either rock or solid ice. After its batteries ran out contact with Philae was lost; meanwhile, there was hope that a better sun angle later in the mission might allow for the batteries to be recharged to an extent, and in fact, contact was briefly restored on a couple of occasions in June and July 2015 but unfortunately not long enough for any significant data transmission.

Rosettas mission was formally scheduled to end at the end of 2015, however, before that time the mission was extended until the end of September 2016, i.e., a full year after the comets perihelion passage and two full years after the spacecrafts arrival. As that time approached Rosetta was placed into progressively lower orbits, and on September 2 it successfully photographed Philae, on its side, and wedged against a large overhanging cliff. On September 30 Rosetta touched down upon the comets surface, and contact was terminated.

The large collection of data collected by Rosetta during the two years it spent orbiting Comet Churyumov-Gerasimenko is still being analyzed and will continue to be for some time yet to come. Just last year, for example, a Spanish amateur astronomer, Jacint Roger, was examining Rosetta images when he found a four-meter-wide moon in images that had been taken on October 21, 2015. This Churyumoon, as it was dubbed, was not a permanent feature, but did orbit the nucleus at a distance of 2 to 3 km for the next two days before disappearing.

The viewing geometry during Comet 67Ps 2015 return to perihelion was not especially favorable, with the comet for the most part remaining at a moderately low elongation in the morning sky and reaching a peak brightness of about 12th magnitude. Meanwhile, although it wont have the fanfare that accompanied this recent return, the comets next return, in 2021, is a very favorable one, similar to that of 1982. It passes through perihelion on November 2 and is closest to Earth (0.42 AU) less than two weeks later, and once again should reach a peak brightness around 9th magnitude.

This Week in History Special Topic Free PDF Download Glossary

See the original post:

Comet of the Week: 67P/Churyomov-Gerasimenko - RocketSTEM

Myth debunked: Comets: harbingers of good and bad news? – Times of Malta

Comets have brought awe upon those observing them since ancient times. Indeed, particularly bright comets have been attributed to major occurrences in history.

Following Caesars murder, a bright comet appeared over Romes skies that was allegedly bright enough to be seen during daytime Augustus attributed this to Caesar himself.

The star of Bethlehem, which purportedly heralded the birth of Jesus Christ, is also thought to possibly have been a comet.

In literature, comets have also oftentimes been used to profess Earthbound events.

While we now know the true nature of comets, their importance in the solar system is still significant.

Comets are one hypothesized manner in which planets could receive water, organic molecules and other minerals, which could make life possible on planets like the Earth. On the other hand, the collision of a comet with a planet teeming with life could spell disaster for those same life forms, resulting in extinction events.

While comets are therefore not messengers of news, they can deliver the materials required for life to barren worlds and conversely deliver impacts which destroy such proliferating biota.

Independent journalism costs money. Support Times of Malta for the price of a coffee.

Read the original post:

Myth debunked: Comets: harbingers of good and bad news? - Times of Malta

What’s up in August? The brightest comet in 23 years – Press Herald

The month of August is named for Augustus Caesar. We have reached the middle of summer and there are as many interesting highlights in our skies, as always, with one additional and rare bonus the brightest comet in 23 years.

So get out under the warm skies and enjoy the great beauty always residing far above us, along with this rare primordial visitor from deep space, not to return again for nearly 7,000 years.

Our four brightest planets will be nicely lined up in the morning sky all month by 3 a.m. each morning. Then there will be the usual close conjunctions with the moon, along with the less usual opposition of our largest asteroid, Ceres. The famous Perseid Meteor Shower will happen on the night of the 11th. This is usually the second best shower each year, a close second to the Geminids in December. But the real bonus will be the remaining views of Comet NEOWISE. It will remain visible all month, but will fade fromvisibility without binoculars by around the middle of August.

Jupiter and Saturn now both rise before sunset, since both are just past opposition, but still nearly at their best for the whole year. They will reach their highest point in our summer sky before midnight.

Mars now rises before midnight and Venus will rise at 2:45 a.m. all month long, becoming the last planet to fill in the quartet of our fellow traveling planets. Notice that Mars is getting visibly brighter and larger each evening as the earth is rapidly catching up with our neighbor in its orbit. The red planet will not begin its retrograde motion until early next month, leading to its close opposition in October.

Our largest and first-discovered asteroid, Ceres, will reach opposition on the 28th in the constellation of Aquarius at 7.7 magnitude, so you would need binoculars. It is 600 miles in diameter, about the size of Texas, and makes up a quarter of all the mass of the millions of asteroids inhabiting the belt between Mars and Jupiter.

The Perseid meteor shower will last for much of this month, but it will peak on Tuesday night the 11th into Wednesday morning. Caused by Comet Swift-Tuttle, this shower lasts for around 20 days, since the material from this comet is spread out over nearly 30 million miles of space. It was last here in 1992. You can expect up to 60 meteors per hour, but the last quarter moon will rise just after midnight to wash out about one third of the meteors after that time, which is when showers usually reach their peak toward morning as the earth is spinning into the source of the meteors after midnight. Look northeast toward Perseus as soon as it gets dark. The radiant of this shower is just below the double cluster in Perseus. Sand grain-sized pieces of this huge comet (it is 16 miles in diameter, one of the largest of all comets) will disintegrate in our upper atmosphere at 36 miles per second, or twice as fast as we are always orbiting the sun.

The star of that memorable night was undoubtedly Comet NEOWISE. Discovered by a low-earth orbiting satellite on March 27, it has already brightened more than 1 million times to second magnitude as of the middle of July when I first saw it. It should still be visible without binoculars as it traverses below the Big Dipper into Coma Berenices and Bootes above Virgo for part of this month, even though it is fading fast. Contrary to popular belief, it is only moving about one degree per day westward right now. You can see it as soon as it gets dark until about 11 p.m., when it sinks too low into the western horizon. It will pass right by a globular star cluster named M53 in Coma Berenices on Aug. 7, which will make a great photo op.

NEOWISE stands for Near Earth Orbiting wide field infrared survey explorer. Most comets are discovered by automated ground-based telescopes doing sky surveys and specifically looking for potentially hazardous asteroids that could hit us in the near future. PanSTARRS, LINEAR, SWAN and NEAT are four more of these that have discovered dozens of new comets and asteroids.

The nucleus of NEOWISE is only 3 miles across, but its long tail stretches about 1 million miles, always facing away from the sun. Its coma is about the size of Earth. NEOWISE has two distinct tails, a straight ion tail and a slightly curved dust tail. NEOWISE is the brightest comet to grace our skies since Hale-Bopp in 1997 and only the fifth bright naked-eye comet in the last 50 years, so make sure you try to catch and photograph it before it disappears, not to be seen again for nearly 7,000 years.

AUGUST HIGHLIGHTS

Aug. 1: Maria Mitchell was born in 1818. She was an important American astronomer, naturalist, and educator who also discovered a comet in 1847. The nearly full moon will be close to Jupiter tonight and near Saturn the next night, soon after sunset.

Aug. 3: Full moon is at noon. This is also known as the Grain, Green Corn or Sturgeon moon. The Messenger Spacecraft was launched to Mercury in 2004.

Aug. 4: The Phoenix mission to Mars was launched in 2007.

Aug. 6: The Curiosity Rover landed on Mars in 2012. It is still working well and making lots of new discoveries and taking many great pictures.

Aug. 9: The moon and Mars will be just one degree apart 1 hour before sunrise.

Aug. 11: Last quarter moon is at 12:46 p.m. The Perseid Meteor Shower peaks tonight.

Aug. 15: The moon passes close to Venus in Gemini in the morning sky an hour before sunrise.

Aug. 17: In 2006, Voyager 1 reached 100 A.U. from the sun, which is twice as far out as Pluto orbits on average. Seven years later, it crossed over the heliopause at 123 A.U., where the influence of our sun ends in space.

Aug. 18: New moon is at 10:43 p.m.

Aug. 25: The Spitzer Space Telescope was launched in 2003. Thats the infrared telescope related to the Hubble Space Telescope. The Spitzer just stopped working at the end of January. Last quarter moon is at 1:59 p.m.

Aug. 28: The moon passes near Jupiter for the second time this month.

Bernie Reim of Wells is co-director of the Astronomical Society of Northern New England.

Invalid username/password.

Please check your email to confirm and complete your registration.

Use the form below to reset your password. When you've submitted your account email, we will send an email with a reset code.

Previous

Next

More here:

What's up in August? The brightest comet in 23 years - Press Herald

Astro Bob: See the twin Messier craters and a curious lunar ‘comet’ – Duluth News Tribune

Ive lived the comet this month. You, too? After so many fainter comets for so many years NEOWISE is like drinking from a fire hose. Last night, when hazy skies and tiredness dissuaded me from driving to a dark site to photograph the comet, I went out anyway, powerless to resist. Blame the aurora. On a late walk with my daughter we noticed the northern horizon aglow with northern lights, so I made a short drive to watch the show on the big screen.

And there it was when I arrived Comet NEOWISE. How could I NOT include it in photos of the aurora?

This odd pair of craters, named Messier A (left) and Messier, may have formed during a single impact. A butterfly-wing pattern of rays above and below the crater surround Messier while twin-tails of debris lie downrange of Messier A. NASA / LRO / ACT-REACT

Weve discussed how the moons entry into the evening sky the past few days will begin to affect the comets visibility. No lunar disrespect intended. The moon is a wonderful place to explore in binoculars and small telescopes in its own right. Unlike bright comets you dont have to wait 10 or 20 years for the orb of night to show up. It cycles around the sky in under a month, its pockets stuffed with goodies. One of those bonbons is a pair of craters named Messier and Messier A.

Use this photo to find the Messier craters. The duo and comet tail are located in the diamond-shaped Sea of Fertility and are visible every clear night until past full moon from July 25 to Aug. 5. Sight the moon at low magnification, navigate to the Sea of Fertility then increase the magnification to 75x 150x for the best view. (Bob King for the News Tribune)

That name might already be familiar to you because it belongs to famous 18th century French comet hunter Charles Messier. Messier compiled a catalog of bright galaxies, star clusters and nebulae that includes many of the finest sights in the night sky for smaller telescopes. Each Messier crater is about 8 miles (12 km) across and located in the western half of the diamond-shaped Sea of Fertility (Mare Fecunditatis).

Artist view of the meteoroid impact on the moon. NASA

Point a telescope at the crater twins and youll immediately be struck by what looks like double tail shooting out of Messier A, which rather resembles the head of a comet. The streaks might also remind you of a jet contrail or the forked tail displayed by NEOWISE shortly after it passed closest to the sun in early July. What youre really seeing are two rays composed of material ejected from the impact that created the two craters. Lunar rays like these form when rocks and boulders excavated by an impact fall back to the surface and dig countless secondary craters of their own, each mini-impact exposing fresh, lighter-toned lunar soil in the process.

The Messier craters (upper right) as they appear in a medium-sized telescope. They likely formed when a small asteroid struck the moon at a very low angle. Damian Peach

Ballistics experiments at NASAs Ames Research Center have shown that when meteoroids and asteroids strike the moon they punch out circular craters until the angle of the impactor drops to about 15 or less. At these super-shallow angles speeding space debris digs out an oval or elliptical crater like the peculiarly elongated Messier.

Likewise with rays. Above 15 an impactor will create a circular pattern of debris, but a low-angle strike will spray material off to one side. One arriving at just a few degrees produces rays running sideways, creating a butterfly-wing pattern. As a result of these experiments, astronomers hypothesize that an asteroid or comet striking the moon at an angle of 1 to 5 at more than 35,000 miles per hour first excavated the trough-shaped Messier and produced faint butterfly wings . Its partner Messier A may have been carved out almost simultaneously by a piece of the impactor that broke off and ricocheted downrange. Debris from that strike formed dual plumes of debris in the direction opposite the impact.

These fascinating craters and their unique rays tell a fascinating story. You can see the crazy lunar comet from now until waning gibbous phase more than 10 nights in a row. How generous of the moon to provide another comet as it steals our dear NEOWISE from view.

Go here to see the original:

Astro Bob: See the twin Messier craters and a curious lunar 'comet' - Duluth News Tribune

Comets Giving Day Takes on Extra Meaning as University’s 50th Anniversary Finale – University of Texas at Dallas

In 2019, Comets Giving Day included a table on the Margaret McDermott Mall where students could write thank-you notes to supporters.

In commemoration of UTDallas 50th anniversary, the fourth annual Comets Giving Day will last 1,969 minutes from Aug. 5 at 10 a.m. until Aug. 6 at 6:49 p.m. More than 50 campus groups will participate in the extended day of giving with a challenge to raise $1 million.

In 1969 the 61stTexas Legislature passed House Bill 303, establishing a state-supported institution of higher education to be known as The University of Texas at Dallas.

We began this year celebrating everything thats made UTDallas great for the past half-century. The resilience and caring shown by our community over the last few months have demonstrated just how great we really are. Comets Giving Day is a time for us to stand together and contribute to the future of this place we all love.

Since 2017 the annual giving event has raised more than $1.2 million for causes across the University. Rescheduled from its original date in April, this years Comets Giving Day will allow students, alumni and friends to renew connections and rally around common goals.

We began this year celebrating everything thats made UTDallas great for the past half-century, said Kyle Edgington PhD13, vice president for development and alumni relations. The resilience and caring shown by our community over the last few months have demonstrated just how great we really are. Comets Giving Day is a time for us to stand together and contribute to the future of this place we all love.

Public-health safety measures may have altered how Giving Day is observed, but the Comet community will still celebrate together this year with a parade of decorated cars around campus and via several other virtual events over the two-day period.

Gifts can be made online, and many individual donations will unlock extra support through challenges and matching opportunities provided by generous sponsors.

Participants can use the hashtag #COMETogetherUTD to join the conversation on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and LinkedIn, and monitor challenges and live leaderboards on the Giving Day website.

Digital ambassadors have raised more than $120,000 for campus groups during past Giving Days. If you are a current or former member of a campus organization or just want to make a difference for the Comet community, join the 2020 digital ambassador team by:

Visit the Comets Giving Day ambassador page for more information and to sign up.

Visit link:

Comets Giving Day Takes on Extra Meaning as University's 50th Anniversary Finale - University of Texas at Dallas

The Sky This Week: Evening comets and morning meteors – Astronomy Magazine

The comet is just a bit fainter than magnitude 2 and youll likely need binoculars or a small telescope to see it. But with optical aid, you should also spot the comets tail, which stands out best in photographs. NEOWISE recently passed Earth on July 23, when it was just 64.1 million miles (103.2 million kilometers) from our planet. As it continues to pull away from the Sun and Earths orbit, it will continue to dim, although observers can expect to enjoy this binocular object for at least the rest of the month.

Saturday, July 25The Moon reaches perigee, the closest point in its orbit around Earth, at 1:02 A.M. EDT. At that time, it will stand 228,889 miles (368,361 kilometers) from our planet. Tonight, our satellite is a 34-percent-lit waxing crescent in Virgo. Youll find it about one-third of the way on a line drawn from magnitude 1 Spica northwest toward magnitude 2.1 Denebola, the tail of Leo the Lion.

Look about 28.5 above the Moon to see another bright star: magnitude 0.1 Arcturus, Botes alpha star. Scan farther northwest to find the familiar Big Dipper asterism, which is part of a much larger constellation: Ursa Major the Great Bear.

Sunday, July 26Observers willing to brave the wee hours of the morning will be rewarded with a dark, moonless sky today. If its particularly clear, consider searching out the Dumbbell Nebula (M27), located in Vulpecula the Fox. This planetary nebula the result of an aging Sun-like star puffing away its outer layers late in life was discovered by Charles Messier in 1764. Youll find it amidst the dusty plane of the Milky Way, which is standing straight up from the southwestern horizon around 2 A.M. EDT. At that time, M27 is roughly 70 high and, although its a bit challenging with binoculars, a small scope will easily show it. A larger scope will bring out more detail. Most telescopes should reveal the nebulas bi-lobed structure, from which it gains its name.

Nearby is open star cluster NGC 6885 (Caldwell 37). This magnitude 6 cluster is roughly 7' across and can sometimes be seen barely with the naked eye. Its an excellent binocular or telescope target. Youll find it less than 5 north-northeast of M27.

Monday, July 27First Quarter Moon occurs at 8:33 A.M. EDT, making this evening is an excellent time to consider some lunar observing. With moonrise occurring in the afternoon, the Moon will still be high in the south at sunset and wont set until after midnight. Even a small telescope or pair of binoculars will bring out immense detail on our satellites face, which appears to observers on Earth as half in daylight and half in darkness during this phase. The line dividing the two is called the terminator, and its an excellent starting point for your observing campaign. Along this line, features will appear with the sharpest contrast, as taller mountaintops and crater rims catch the sunlight, while lower-lying areas remain in shadow. Along the terminator at First Quarter are several craters, including Archimedes, Ptolemaeus, Alphonsus, Arzachel, and Maginus.

Also visible are several darker seas, or maria, which are actually the smooth remnants of ancient lava flows. Among those that are easy to spot at First Quarter are the isolated Mare Crisium in the Moons upper right quadrant (for Northern Hemisphere observers), as well as Mare Serenitatis, Mare Tranquillitatis, and Mare Fecunditatis, which form much of the large, dark region to Crisiums lower left.

See the original post:

The Sky This Week: Evening comets and morning meteors - Astronomy Magazine

Comet NEOWISE and the International Space Station will be visible tonight – Cambridgeshire Live

Stargazers are in for a treat tonight with both the International Space Station and Comet NEOWISE visible in UK skies.

Last night, the comet was at its closest to Earth and in turn at its most visible.

But if you're yet to see the super bright comet, there is still hope because it will remain visible for the remainder of July.

It's one of the brightest comets to pass over the Earth in recent history, making it easy to spot without a telescope or binoculars.

It's extra good news for amateur astronomers as the International Space Station (ISS) will also be visible in the night sky on several occasions on Friday and Saturday.

So pack up the car, grab a blanket and head to one of Cambridgeshire's many stargazing spots to enjoy the wonder of the night sky.

Keep reading to find out how to spot the super bright Comet Neowise and the ISS.

Experts say to find the comet you need to look east.

The comet will appear underneath the Plough constellation, and just above the horizon.

Space.com advises that stargazers hold the bottom of their clenched fist on the horizon and the comet will appear above it.

Sometimes known as 'the Big Dipper' The Plough is part of a larger constellation called the Ursa major.

It's easy to spot in the sky because it looks somewhat like a big saucepan with a handle.

The comet was at its closest to the Earth on Thursday(July 23) but by Saturday (July 25) the comet will have moved so that it is directly underneath the Plough, as it moves further westwards and slightly higher on our horizon every night.

The International Space Station (ISS) will be visible from the UK tonight and tomorrow.

The ISS orbits the Earth about 16 times a day but it's not always visible at the most sociable times,reports the Mirror. It travels at a height of about 400km.

Tonight, it will be visible at 10.29pm and in the early hours of tomorrow at 12.06am.

There will be other chances to see it over the weekend, as detailed below.

If you're looking for a way to stay up to date with the latest breaking news from around Cambridgeshire, the CambridgeshireLive newsletter is a good place to start.

The daily update will deliver the topnewsandfeatures to your inbox every morning and evening.

We choose the most important stories of the day to include in the newsletter, including crime, court news, long reads, traffic and travel, food and drink articles and more.

Signing up to the newsletter is simple. Just put your email address in the box at the top of this story and click 'subscribe'.

It's one of the many ways that you can read the news that matters to you from CambridgeshireLive.

Friday, July 24, 10.29pm

Saturday, July 25, 12.06am

Saturday, July 25, 9.43pm

Saturday, July 25, 10.30pm

Saturday, July 25, 11.18pm

Monday, July 27, 12.08am

To the naked eye, theISS looks a big white dot that moves quickly across the sky without changing direction, unlike aircraft, for example.

It is usually the brightest object in the night sky after the Moon.

More here:

Comet NEOWISE and the International Space Station will be visible tonight - Cambridgeshire Live

Comets play the Feud – THE MERCURY – The UTD Mercury

The UTD Athletics department introduced a virtual tournament for student athletes called Comets Feud over the summer break, inspired by the Family Feud-style game show format.

To play, each UTD sport contributes a team of five players who compete against other teams in brackets, progressing from quarterfinals to semifinals to championships. Assistant Athletics Director Dave Wester said the tournament is a way to give student athletes a reason to be competitive with each other in a friendly way, even from home.

We started it around a month ago, Wester said. We didnt know where it would go. It was supposed to be just a fun game but student athletes loved it so much that we decided to turn it into a tournament. Our coaches loved it and students seemed to enjoy the competitive side of it.

With the onslaught of the current pandemic in March, athletic seasons were cut short and student athletes were sent home on extended leave from their respective sports. Comets Feud was the brainchild of Associate Athletics Director Bruce Unrue, who created it with the intention of keeping the athletics community together in the midst of uncertain times, inspired by seeing a Facebook livestream of a church holding a similar contest.

They werent seeing their teammates and we werent seeing them so there was a big disconnect going on, Unrue said. I was trying to come up with something fun to do that could get the student athletes in front of each other again. Just to have them at least see each others faces and interact a little bit, because thats a big part of being part of a team: being around your teammates and not only competing on the field but having time to spend together.

Each episode of the tournament is recorded through Microsoft Teams and then uploaded to YouTube for the general public to view. Wester said it is a way to give the fans further insight and taste of what student athletes are up to. Initially, the game show was uploaded to YouTube and advertised through the Comet Sports Twitter account, but since posting on Instagram TV, viewership has greatly increased, with some episodes on YouTube reaching over 150 views, Unrue said.

The idea was first introduced to the Student Athletics Advisory Committee (SAAC) as a way to test the waters to see if there would be interest within the student body. SAAC President Christian Kondor said that the tournament was definitely something the committee wanted to do, fitting with their goal of fostering a sense of community within the athletics department and building camaraderie between the teams.

Kondor was also involved as a participant and said that the game show had an overwhelmingly positive response. Athletes were eager to play and it gained traction quickly.

The prompts and responses were absolutely hilarious, Kondor said. We were super competitive, because thats one of the things you can really count on with an athletics department event. If you make it competitive, were going to be invested and its all in good fun but people get really into it and this was no exception.

Much of the logistical preparation for the tournament was handled by the athletics directors, with Unrue preparing graphics and sound effects as well as editing for each episode, while Wester prepared prompts and a script for each taping.

We had a group meeting and I was asked if I wanted to host, Wester said. I said Sure, it sounds like a blast! I enjoy interacting with our student athletes and I feel like I have a good relationship with many of them. I also saw this as an opportunity to get to know more of the student athletes better, so I jumped at the opportunity.

Wester said they are still going through the learning phases of remote access to everything, but the sports teams have gotten stronger as a group just by seeing and talking with each other. He said its great to be able to touch base with students weekly and see how theyre doing given the circumstances.

Its like a wellness check, Wester said. We care about their wellbeing and during the summertime we dont always get to see them anyway, but this pandemic has actually prompted us to reach out to them more often to make sure everything is okay. Theres a flux right now about whats going to happen. Nobody knows and the more familiarity you have in your life, the easier it is to deal with it. If they are going through a tough time, they have something to rely on that will be there for them, and thats us.

See the rest here:

Comets play the Feud - THE MERCURY - The UTD Mercury

Backyard Universe: Comet NEOWISE thrills some, a yawn to others – The Fayetteville Observer

Although pulling away and slowly fading, Comet NEOWISE is still in our night sky.

Comet NEOWISE is now fading as it moves away from both the sun and Earth.

The feedback Im getting from friends and online comments tells me that while being the brightest and easiest to see comet for northern hemisphere observers in 23 years, the comet eluded some folks entirely. Some who did spot it were clearly disappointed.

In 1997, Comet Hale-Bopp remained at naked eye brightness for more than a year, allowing most anyone anywhere to glance upward and see this large bright comet.

But Comet NEOWISE was more challenging to see by comparison.

I understand fully the range of impressions Comet NEOWISE generated. Over the past month, Ive viewed and photographed the comet from suburban locations, local darker sky locations and in beautifully clear skies over a mountain in western North Carolina. Ive also checked it out when it was barely above the horizon and again when it rode higher in the evening sky.

NEOWISE looked different from each location and each changing position in the sky.

How much difference did my observing location play in how impressive the comet appeared?

It made ALL the difference.

From brightly lit suburban locations I never saw Comet NEOWISE with my eyes alone, but using a pair of 7X50 binoculars it was obvious. I couldnt imagine anyone in the center of Fayetteville seeing the comet naked eye, and it would have been tough with binoculars.

The view became more rewarding from a darker site I often use northeast of Fayetteville. There, I could see the comet naked eye although it wasnt an obvious evening sky object. Binoculars, however, revealed a very "cometlike" fuzzy object with a tail.

My best view came under the best weather conditions from the darkest sky location.

On July 18, I observed and photographed NEOWISE from Grandfather Mountain in western North Carolina. After obtaining special permission to be on the mountain after dark, I wasnt able to work from the top of Grandfather in the visitors center parking lot. The large rock face to the north obscured the view of NEOWISE. I had to set up around the 4,433 foot elevation of the near 6,000 foot mountain where no obstructions blocked the part of the sky where the comet was.

From that location, under clear, haze-free skies, NEOWISE was at its best. A very comet like object was very evident to the naked eye, and a large twin-tailed comet appeared in binoculars. Photographs I made that night were far superior to any I made locally.

This greatly improved view wasnt surprising to me, but may not have been evident to the more casual observer. The clearest skies over the darkest of location are everything when looking for and seeing a comet well, even the brightest ones.

Folks who went to the trouble to scope out and travel to those locations had a memorable view, while folks who simply walked outside to an urban backyard probably wonder what all the fuss was about.

Our local weather and the time of year is also a problem when viewing NEOWISE. We need a night thats clear, following an afternoon when we have the deepest blue sky thats free of haze and clouds, like we have in October. Thats a tall order in summer in our area when late day thunderstorms are the rule.

NEOWISE still around

Although pulling away from us and slowly fading, Comet NEOWISE is still in our conveniently timed evening sky. To make things better, its getting higher in the western sky and is observable for a longer period of time each evening.

But the bright moon, which becomes full in early August, is also in our evening skies now, the light from which can tend to wash out the fainter comet. Starting around Aug. 5, we start to have some moon-free time during our evenings once again.

Finder charts to help you locate Comet NEOWISE in the evening sky and additional information about the comet can be found on Sky and Telescope magazines website at https://skyandtelescope.org/ and the site http://www.space.com.

Although the comet is fading, the unpredictable nature of comets could mean a sudden increase in brightness or a dramatic and rapid fading.

Its all the more reason to get ourselves into the best position possible to see this visitor from the outer solar system, one that wont return again for 6,800 years.

If you have a question about astronomy send it to Backyard Universe P.O. Box 297, Stedman, NC 28391 or email jhorne@fayobserver.com.

Read the original post:

Backyard Universe: Comet NEOWISE thrills some, a yawn to others - The Fayetteville Observer

The Best Way to Watch Comet NEOWISE, Wherever You Are – Scientific American

Comet NEOWISE has been entertaining space enthusiasts across the Northern Hemisphere. Although its official name is C/2020 F3, the comet has been dubbed NEOWISE after the Near-Earth Object Wide-Field Infrared Survey Explorer (NEOWISE) space telescope that first noticed it earlier this year. This icy snowball with a gassy tail made its closest approach to the sun on July 3 and is now heading back from whence it came: the far reaches of the outer solar system. Its long, looping orbit around our star ensures that after passing closest to Earth on July 22, Comet NEOWISE will not return for some 6,800 years.

Even though the comet is now bright enough to observe with unaided eyes, inexperienced stargazers might have trouble knowing when and where to look. Scientific American spoke to Jackie Faherty, an astronomer at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City, for observing tips and a better appreciation of why comets are so special.

[An edited transcript of the interview follows.]

How does one prepare to watch Comet NEOWISE with the naked eye?

Find the darkest possible swath of sky and make sure your eyes are adjusted so that you give yourself the best possible opportunity to see faint objects. It means: dont just walk outside after staring at lights or screens and expect to see [the comet] really well. You need 15 minutes or so to adjust your eyes, so that your pupils are adjusted, and theyre used to seeing fainter things. Its the same as walking into a dark room, and everybody knows that [you] cant see [things] firstand then, all of a sudden, you start seeing things. You need to do the same thing when you walk outside. And use the Comet NEOWISE app developed by astrophysicist Hanno Rein of University of Toronto Scarborough to see exactly where it is, so that you know what direction you need to look. And then the key would be to find yourself a place that is the darkest possible, that [has] no lights.

Which direction should one look?

[The comet] appears [in the evening] in the northwestern sky. But the easiest thing is [to use] the app to help you [find it].

When is the best time to watch?

Were going to catch [the comet] in the evening sky. Were calling it primetime viewing, which is when the sun has just set.

Will Comet NEOWISE be brightest when its closest to us?

Well, its a trade-off. When [the object is] closer to the sun, its getting heated up. And so its brighter because its outgassing [warming so that its ice turns to vapor], and its got the light reflecting off of [the gas]. [But] you couldnt really see it [earlier], when it was in the glare of the sun.

And when its closer to us, it gets brighter, because of [the decrease in] distance. Something thats closer to you is going to be easier to see, even if its fainter.

Would we be able to see the comet in megacities such as New York and Los Angeles?

I have seen shots [from] residential areas in L.A. And I cant believe that people saw the thing through the light pollution in L.A., which I would have thought would be worse than [in] New York City.

What I often advise people during meteor showers, which are similar in some ways, is to go to rooftops. A rooftop can give you a very clear view to the horizon, and itll let you get away from light pollution.

Upper Manhattans Inwood Hill Park is always an excellent spot for low light pollution in [New York City], or toward the piers on the West Side. New Jersey is not so bad with light pollution when youre looking in that [northwestern] direction. The Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum used to have an excellent spot for stargazing on [its] platform. And amateur astronomers used to go to the High Line [in the neighborhood of Chelsea]thats a nice darkish area.

Does it matter where in the U.S. youre located?

[Your location] will change how high above the horizon [the comet] gets for you. But because this is Northern Hemisphereaccessible, the U.S. has a visibility window thats excellent for the country. Ive seen the shots from New York to California to Florida.

Would someone be able to take a good picture using a smartphone?

Your best [bet is] to have [a smartphones camera] on a longer exposure. The longer the exposure, the better the picture, because [the comet] is faint, and you will see it as this fuzzy thing. Your eye cant quite do that for you. You make your eye open, but it can't record the photons and let them accumulate, and thats what the camera is able to do.

What is the comet going to do next?

[After] July 22, it gets dimmer and dimmer as it gets farther from Earth. And it very quickly becomes something that you cannot see with your naked eye, even on the clearest night. But [with] binoculars or a telescope, well still be good for seeing it for a while. Then it goes off to the outer part of the solar system, and itll be gone for a couple thousand years before it makes the trip back. It has a long orbit around the sun; most comets do. It takes them hundreds or thousands of years in order to go around the sun. They [mostly] hang out in the outer part of the solar system.

Why should anyone care about comets?

If you could capture the comet and bring it back down to Earth and study it in a lab, you would have one of the holy grails for understanding the ingredients to make a planetand possibly to make it habitable. Like, How did life get delivered here? Comets are one of the things we look to for answers. Theyve got all that primordial material that was around to form the planet that would become Earthbeing filled with water and have life teeming on it. So from that perspective, a comet is a really important object to study. But we cant capture it and bring it back down here.

Weve attempted to land on a comet before. We did this with Comet 67P. It was a European mission, and the whole thing was called Rosetta, with this Philae lander. [Now] we have a really cool mission called OSIRIS-REx. And this is a mission to an asteroid called Bennu that is going to land, acquire a sample and return it to Earth, which is awesome and crazy.

Comets were often markersomensbefore we understood what they were. Thats how people saw themthe bearers of good things, the bearers of bad things. I find it fascinating that in this year 2020 we have a marker in the sky. And its a reminder that we should look up more. We should pay attention to the sky [and what] it brings us.

Can anyone predict when the next bright comet will come?

Can we predict the next naked-eye-exciting comet, the one thats going to come in and wow us all the way that NEOWISE is wowing us right now? There are some that are lining up that will make a good appearancesuch as Halleys Comet, for instance. That orbit is like 80 years or something. So we know when [that comet is] coming; we know when its going. But [what] you want to know is: Is there going to be one next year? Is there going to be one next month? Unfortunately, comets are just unpredictable, erratic beasts. You dont know whats going to happen to them as they get close to the sun. Sometimes they just break apart. Comets are notoriously unpredictable. So I can't tell you the next one.

The NEOWISE space telescope is monitoring the sky, looking for these kinds of things. And there are several different surveys that are on the lookout for objects that are going to come close to Earth. But who knows when they will find them. That is the beauty of science: scientists are looking at the data every day and trying to find something.

See the original post here:

The Best Way to Watch Comet NEOWISE, Wherever You Are - Scientific American

What Are Comets? – Time and Date

Comets are small celestial bodies that orbit the Sun. Primarily made of dust and ice, they are thought to be remnants of the formation of the Solar System.

Comet PanSTARRS was visible in early 2013.

thinkstockphoto.com

Comets are thought to come from 2 places in the Solar System:

What are meteor showers?

One of the distinguishing features of a comet is that most of them develop a tail, known as a coma when they come close to the Sun.

Away from the Sun, comets are frozen celestial bodies that are hard to detect. However, as a comet comes closer to the Sun, the Suns heat and radiation vaporize its ice and dust. These vaporized gasses collect dust and stream from the center of the comet, just like a tail. This tail can be thousands of miles long.

While most comets passing by the Sun are hard to observe from Earth without specialized equipment, some comets are bright enough to be seen by the naked eye. A comets brightness is due to sunlight reflecting and refracting off the dust in the tail.

Comets usually have two tails, which point in different directions. The dust in the comet is responsible for one tail. This tail, also called the dust tail, tends to be broad and curved. The gasses in the comet make the other tail, called the plasma or the ion tail. This tail is thin and straight and tends to point directly away from the Sun.

What are asteroids?

A light year (light-year or lightyear) is a unit of distance and is defined by the International Astronomical Union as the distance traveled by light in a vacuum during a Julian year. It is approximately equal to 10 trillion kilometers (6 trillion miles).

Topics: Astronomy, Comets, Asteroids

Read the original post:

What Are Comets? - Time and Date

Comets: Facts About The ‘Dirty Snowballs’ of Space | Space

Comets are icy bodies in space that release gas or dust. They are often compared to dirty snowballs, though recent research has led some scientists to call them snowy dirtballs. Comets contain dust, ice, carbon dioxide, ammonia, methane and more. Astronomers think comets are leftovers from the material that initially formed the solar system about 4.6 billion years ago.

Some researchers think comets might have originally brought some of the water and organic molecules to Earth that now make up life here. To research this hypothesis, the Rosetta mission, which landed a probe on a comet on Nov. 12, 2014, is studying its nucleus and environment, observing how it changes as it approaches the sun.

Comets orbit the sun, but most are believed to inhabit in an area known as the Oort Cloud, far beyond the orbit of Pluto. Occasionally a comet streaks through the inner solar system; some do so regularly, some only once every few centuries. Many people have never seen a comet, but those who have won't easily forget the celestial show.

The solid nucleus or core of a comet consists mostly of ice and dust coated with dark organic material, according to NASA, with the ice composed mainly of frozen water but perhaps other frozen substances as well, such as ammonia, carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide and methane. The nucleus may have a small rocky core.

As a comet gets closer to the sun, the ice on the surface of the nucleus begins turning into gas, forming a cloud known as the coma. Radiation from the sun pushes dust particles away from the coma, forming a dust tail, while charged particles from the sun convert some of the comet's gases into ions, forming an ion tail. Since comet tails are shaped by sunlight and the solar wind, they always point away from the sun. Comet tails may spray planets, as was the case in 2013 with Comet Siding Spring and Mars.

At first glance, comets and asteroids may appear very similar. The difference lies in the presence of the coma and tail. Sometimes, a comet may be misidentified as an asteroid before follow-up observations reveal the presence of either or both of these features.

The nuclei of most comets are thought to measure 10 miles (16 kilometers) or less. Some comets have comas that can reach nearly 1 million miles (1.6 million km) wide, and some have tails reaching 100 million miles (160 million km) long.

We can see a number of comets with the naked eye when they pass close to the sun because their comas and tails reflect sunlight or even glow because of energy they absorb from the sun. However, most comets are too small or too faint to be seen without a telescope.

Comets leave a trail of debris behind them that can lead to meteor showers on Earth. For instance, the Perseid meteor shower occurs every year between August 9 and 13 when Earth passes through the orbit of the Swift-Tuttle comet.

Astronomers classify comets based on the durations of their orbits around the sun. Short-period comets need roughly 200 years or less to complete one orbit, long-period comets take more than 200 years, and single-apparition comets are not bound to the sun, on orbits that take them out of the solar system, according to NASA. Recently, scientists have also discovered comets in the main asteroid belt these main-belt comets might be a key source of water for the inner terrestrial planets.

Scientists think short-period comets, also known as periodic comets, originate from a disk-shaped band of icy objects known as the Kuiper Belt beyond Neptune's orbit, with gravitational interactions with the outer planets dragging these bodies inward, where they become active comets. Long-period comets are thought to come from the nearly spherical Oort Cloud even further out, which get slung inward by the gravitational pull of passing stars. In 2017, scientists found there may be seven times more big long-period comets than previously thought.

Some comets, called sun-grazers, smash right into the sun or get so close that they break up and evaporate. Some researchers are also concerned that comets may pose a threat to Earth as well.

In general, comets are named after their discoverer. For example, comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 got its name because it was the ninth short-periodic comet discovered by Eugene and Carolyn Shoemaker and David Levy. Spacecraft have proven very effective at spotting comets as well, so the names of many comets incorporate the names of missions such as SOHO or WISE.

In antiquity, comets inspired both awe and alarm, "hairy stars" resembling fiery swords that appeared unpredictably in the sky. Often, comets seemed to be omens of doom the most ancient known mythology, the Babylonian "Epic of Gilgamesh," described fire, brimstone, and flood with the arrival of a comet, and the Roman emperor Nero saved himself from the "curse of the comet" by having all possible successors to his throne executed. This fear was not just limited to the distant past in 1910, people in Chicago sealed their windows to protect themselves from what they thought was the comet's poisonous tail.

For centuries, scientists thought comets traveled in the Earth's atmosphere, but in 1577, observations made by Danish astronomer Tycho Brahe revealed they actually traveled far beyond the moon. Isaac Newton later discovered that comets move in elliptical, oval-shaped orbits around the sun, and correctly predicted that they could return again and again.

Chinese astronomers kept extensive records on comets for centuries, including observations of Halley's Comet going back to at least 240 B.C., historic annals that have proven valuable resources for later astronomers.

A number of recent missions have ventured to comets. NASA's Deep Impact collided an impactor into Comet Tempel 1 in 2005 and recorded the dramatic explosion that revealed the interior composition and structure of the nucleus. In 2009, NASA announced samples the Stardust mission returned from Comet Wild 2 revealed a building block of life.

In 2014, the European Space Agency's Rosetta spacecraft entered orbit around Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. The Philae lander touched down on Nov 12, 2014. Among the Rosetta mission's many discoveries was the first detection of organic molecules on the surface of a comet; a strange song from Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko; the possibilities that the comet's odd shape may be due to it spinning apart, or resulting from two comets fusing together; and the fact that comets may possess hard, crispy outsides and cold but soft insides, just like fried ice cream. On Sept. 30, 2016, Rosetta intentionally crash-landed on the comet, ending its mission.

Halley's Comet is likely the most famous comet in the world, even depicted in the Bayeux Tapestry that chronicled the Battle of Hastings of 1066. It becomes visible to the naked eye every 76 years when it nears the sun. When Halley's Comet zoomed near Earth in 1986, five spacecraft flew past it and gathered unprecedented details, coming close enough to study its nucleus, which is normally concealed by the comet's coma. The roughly potato-shaped, 9-mile-long (15 km) comet contains equal parts ice and dust, with some 80 percent of the ice made of water and about 15 percent of it consisting of frozen carbon monoxide. Researchers believe other comets are chemically similar to Halley's Comet. The nucleus of Halley's Comet was unexpectedly extremely dark black its surface, and perhaps those of most others, is apparently covered with a black crust of dust over most of the ice, and it only releases gas when holes in this crust expose ice to the sun.

The comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 collided spectacularly with Jupiter in 1994, with the giant planet's gravitational pull ripping the comet apart for at least 21 visible impacts. The largest collision created a fireball that rose about 1,800 miles (3,000 km) above the Jovian cloud tops as well as a giant dark spot more than 7,460 miles (12,000 km) across about the size of the Earth and was estimated to have exploded with the force of 6,000 gigatons of TNT.

A recent, highly visible comet was Hale-Bopp, which came within 122 million miles (197 million km) of Earth in 1997. Its unusually large nucleus gave off a great deal of dust and gas estimated at roughly 18 to 25 miles (30 to 40 km) across appeared bright to the naked eye.

Comet ISON was expected to give a spectacular show in 2013. However, the sun-grazer did not survive its close encounter with the sun and was destroyed in December.

Additional reporting by Nola Taylor Redd, Space.com contributor

Explore the solar system

Additional resources

Go here to see the original:

Comets: Facts About The 'Dirty Snowballs' of Space | Space

How to See Comet Neowise Before Its Gone – WIRED

In late March, a team of astronomers working on a space telescope mission called Neowise discovered a comet booking it past the sun, 160 million miles away from Earth. The comet, officially known as C/2020 F3 but usually just referred to as Neowise, is a 3-mile-wide chunk of ice and dust on a 6,000-year loop around the solar system. Its just one of thousands of space rocks discovered with the Neowise telescope, but its trajectory means that for a few weeks this summer it will give observers in the northern hemisphere a rare cosmic light show.

This is the most impressive-looking comet that I have seen since the 1990s with Hale-Bopp, says George Hripcsak, an amateur astronomer in New York City. Hale-Bopp is a comet on a 2,500-year orbit around the sun that made its closest pass by Earth in 1997. It was visible to the naked eye for a year and a half, and famously inspired the mass suicide of the Heavens Gate cult. (Although comet Neowise isnt quite as bright as Hale-Bopp was, it also doesnt appear to have prompted any human sacrifices.)

The best time to catch a glimpse of Neowise was in early July, just after it made its closest approach to the sun and reached peak brightness. The comet has grown noticeably dimmer over the past few days as it moves away from the sun, but if you havent had a chance to check it out yet, its not too late. Neowise makes its closest approach to the Earth on Thursday, and if you live in the northern hemisphere youll still be able to see it with your naked eye for a few more days. We asked amateur astronomers for their best tips on how to go comet-spotting.

What to Look For

Like all comets, Neowise consists of a dense nucleus made of ice, dust, and ionized gas that form a brilliant double tail as they blow off the comet. The Neowise tail is huge; it covers as much sky as if you were to place 12 full moons side by side. Seeing a tail that long doesnt happen very often, says Hripcsak.

When to See Comet Neowise

If you want to spot the comet, the best time to go stargazing is about an hour after sunset. Depending on where you live, this will probably be around 10 pm. The comet will be visible for about an hour or so before it drops below the horizon. It needs to be dark enough for you to be able to pick out the entire Big Dipper, not just the handle, says Katherine Troche, an amateur astronomer in New York City. If you can get away from the streetlights, your visibility will improve, but you may still need binoculars as the comet will become less bright over the next few weeks.

How to Spot the Comet

Comet Neowise is visible from anywhere in the northern hemisphere. But the night sky is a pretty big space to search, so amateur and professional astronomers have built a number of apps to help you find celestial objects, including the comet, based on your location. If you want to stargaze like the pros, theres SkySafari 6 for iOS and Android phones, but itll set you back $20. Free apps include Celestrons SkyPortal.

Read the original here:

How to See Comet Neowise Before Its Gone - WIRED