SPA Comet
News, January 2005
We now have a bright comet gracing the evening sky,
however it isn’t that spectacular and appears much as a large globular
cluster. Discovered by American amateur
astronomer Don Machholz on August 27 with a 0.15m f8 reflector x30, it has the
designation 2004 Q2, signifying that it was the second comet discovered in the
second half of August. The first was
also an amateur discovery, but this time by CCD observer Roy Tucker, and this
has remained much fainter. Don spent
nearly 1500 hours searching for his latest find, which is his tenth.
2004 Q2 reaches its closest point to the Sun outside
the orbit of the Earth, but it conveniently does this when it is nearly at
opposition, so we get a good view.
Comets that remain more distant from the Sun than we do rarely have
significant tails, and this one is no exception. Under dark skies you can see a thin gas tail, with the dust tail
at quite an angle to it. For the next
week it remains close to the Pleiades and about magnitude 3.5, providing an
excellent opportunity for photographs or CCD images. It is still moving northward and becomes circumpolar by the end
of the month. It should remain a naked
eye object well into February, at least from dark sky sites, so there is plenty
of time to observe it. You should be
able to observe it with binoculars into May, and this provides an excellent
opportunity to practice making magnitude estimates.
Because of its brightness and favourable observing
circumstances I expect comet Machholz to go zooming up the list of best
observed comets, which is currently headed by Hale-Bopp, Ikeya-Zhang and
Hyakutake. Comet 2001 Q4 (NEAT), which
put on a good show last May is currently 6th, but I expect it to
climb further as there are still many more observations come in. Quite a few observers are following comet
Machholz, and I’ve already had reports from Mark Allison, John Coates, Mike
Feist, David Frydman, Cliff Meredith and Ken Whayman. I suspect these will be the first of a deluge! Do send in your reports, but understand if a
reply is not immediately forthcoming as I may have drowned in the flood! Ken set me an interesting poser as he
observed a faint point of light moving across the comet’s coma. Investigation suggests that this was a
satellite in equatorial orbit some 40,000 km from the Earth.
Comet 2003 K4 (LINEAR), mentioned in my last report,
had something of an unusual light curve and peaked in brightness some three
weeks before perihelion. It was visible
as it passed through the LASCO fields, with an unexpected addition in the shape
of comet 2004 R2 (ASAS). This second
comet was a rather small object and didn’t survive perihelion. Comet LINEAR will probably start fading
rapidly this month, so we won’t get a chance to observe it again. Comet 2004 H6 (SWAN), also mentioned last
time, faded very rapidly and few observers followed it after July. Another SWAN comet appeared in the SOHO
coronagraph fields in November and a few observers in more equatorial locations
have seen it. The professional search
programmes are finding more and more “odd” asteroids and a recent one is 2002
RN109, which has perihelion at 2.7 AU and a period of 36,000
years.
Comet 2003 T4 (LINEAR) is brightening fairly slowly
and at the moment doesn’t look like becoming a naked eye object. It is currently about 10th
magnitude and could brighten by another three magnitudes. It is best observed in the early morning,
but can also be glimpsed in the early evening.
Not many people are following it, perhaps because of its location low in
the north west. We can follow it in the
evening sky for another week or two, with Vega making a convenient beacon to
begin star hopping from. In the morning
sky it remains visible until mid March, by which time it should be around 7th
magnitude.
I’ll be describing all the exciting objects that
have been visible during 2004, which has been a record year for naked eye
comets, at the January meeting and will give an update on the prospects for
2003 T4. I’ll also give a demonstration
on how to make magnitude estimates, which are perhaps the most difficult aspect
of cometary observation. I hope to see
many of you at the meeting.
Jonathan Shanklin