[Chaos-l] Fwd: [obsessionusers] New Circumpolar Comet Yi-SWAN

E. Allen Davis starstorm151 at embarqmail.com
Wed Apr 8 16:18:02 EDT 2009


Something that just appeared on the obession telescope yahoo group.  Maybe something to watch...allen 






New comet discovered. Happy hunting! 
______ 
Howie (Residing In Akko Israel) 
15" Obsession #821 /Argo Navis/ServoCAT Jr. 

A small 8th-magnitude comet is now making its way slowly across Cassiopeia toward Perseus. The surprise visitor, called Comet Yi-SWAN, should be within reach of small telescopes for most of April and May 2009. However, bright moonlight will make it a challenge to spot until the second half of April. 

So far, observers describe the comet as a diffuse glow just a few arcminutes across. No one has yet reported a tail, but that could change in the coming days as the Moon's glare wanes. 

Because of its high declination, Comet Yi-SWAN is theoretically visible all night from mid-northern latitudes. But early rising skywatchers have the best chance, because Cassiopeia is highest during the predawn hours. 

On Saturday evening, April 11th, the comet passes just 0.4° south of Schedar (α Cassiopeiae), so they'll be in the same low-power telescopic field. On Thursday night, April 23-24, the comet will glide only 1.2° south of the Double Cluster in Perseus. 

The Discovery 

Korean amateur Dae-am Yi was the first person to notice the comet. On March 26th, he obtained two images of it with a Canon 5D camera and 90-mm lens. But word was slow to reach the Central Bureau for Astronomical Telegrams (CBAT) at the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the world's clearinghouse for comet discoveries. 

Independently, Rob Matson reported to CBAT on April 4th that he'd found a possible comet in SWAN images posted on the SOHO website. 

Recognizing that the objects were one and the same, CBAT astronomers announced the find on IAU Circulars 9034 and 9035 and gave it the name Comet Yi-SWAN (C/2009 F6). Preliminary calculations by Brian G. Marsden indicate the comet is traveling in a highly inclined parabolic orbit, tipped 85.7° to the plane of the ecliptic. At perihelion on May 8th, the comet will be 1.27 astronomical units (190 million km) from the Sun and half again farther from Earth. 

The ephemeris below, from Marsden's orbital elements, gives the comet's right ascension and declination (equinox 2000.0) at 0 hours Universal Time on selected dates, along with its elongation angle from the Sun, predicted visual magnitude, and the constellation in which it lies. 




__._,_.___ 
Messages in this topic ( 1 ) Reply (via web post) | Start a new topic 
Messages | Files | Photos | Links | Database | Polls | Members 

MARKETPLACE 


>From kitchen basics to easy recipes - join the Group from Kraft Foods 

I found a way to make over $12,000/month online!. 
Yahoo! Groups
Change settings via the Web (Yahoo! ID required) 
Change settings via email: Switch delivery to Daily Digest | Switch format to Traditional 
Visit Your Group | Yahoo! Groups Terms of Use | Unsubscribe 



Recent Activity 

    • 
  3 
New Members 
    • 
  1 
New Photos 

Visit Your Group 



Group Charity 

Give a laptop 

Get a laptop: One 

laptop per child 

Yahoo! Groups 

Auto Enthusiast Zone 

Auto Enthusiast Zone 

Discover auto groups 

Yahoo! Groups 

Weight Management Challenge Join others who 

are losing pounds. 
. 

__,_._,___
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://rtpnet.org/pipermail/chaos-l/attachments/20090408/1c914694/attachment.htm>


More information about the Chaos-l mailing list