Wanna See A Comet or Two?

If you’ve always wanted to spot a comet with your very own eyes, there are a couple of them inbound that you should be able to see in the next few weeks. They’re called Comet LINEAR and Comet NEAT. Right now, Comet LINEAR is hard find to in the bright glow of dawn just above the eastern horizon before sunrise, and Comet NEAT is visible only from the Southern Hemisphere. But that will soon change.

For now, in the final week of April and the first few days of May, North American and European skywatchers do have a shot at spotting Comet LINEAR before dawn on clear mornings. Look with binoculars just above the horizon due east about 60 minutes before your local time of sunrise.

Later on in the month, both LINEAR and NEAT will come into in the evening sky. Starting around May 5th or 6th, scan for Comet NEAT just above the southwest horizon as evening twilight fades. Look for a small, fuzzy “star” with a small tail pointing to the upper left. (The much brighter star Sirius will also be low in the southwest; on May 5th the comet will be not far to its left, and on May 6th the comet will be to Sirius’s upper left.) In the next two weeks Comet NEAT will get much higher in the southwest at nightfall, though it will also fade. Binocular users may be able to follow it through the end of May.

Around May 26th or 28th, Comet LINEAR could steal the show when it too enters the evening sky. Look for it just above the west-southwest horizon as twilight fades. It will get only a little higher in the following week or two, while fading rapidly.

Full details, including charts showing when and where to look for both comets (from the Southern Hemisphere too!) appear in the May 2004 issue of SKY & TELESCOPE and in the article “The Double Comet Show of 2004,” online at SkyandTelescope.com.

Thanks to Alan MacRobert at Sky & Telescope for this information!

Sedna: The Latest of the Outermost Objects in the Solar System

Sedna
Sedna

You gotta love the Hubble Space Telescope. There it is up there, looking out across the deeps of space and time, spotting shreds of galaxies as they formed some 300,000 to 500,000 years after the Big Bang, and then it turns around and gives us a view of a little shard of a world called Sedna. This place, smaller than the Moon, smaller than Pluto, lies about 90 times the distance between the Earth and Sun, out in a region of the solar system called the Kuiper Belt. It’s a leftover bit of ice (mostly) from the formation of the solar system some 5.5 billion years ago. It’s so dim and small that HST’s image is one pixel across. But, it’s an informative pixel!

For instance, it tells us that (so far) HST hasn’t spotted a companion to this planetoid, although the astronomer who discovered it on March 15, 2004, calculated its spin rate (it’s “day”) and determined that it should have a moon of some kind. The fact that it doesn’t illustrates one of those wonderful “non-results” that tells us valuable information. Science is replete with stuff like this — what looks like a non-result actually helps us put limits on an object’s actions or size or mass or other characteristic. It reminds me of the observation run I did in Hawaii where we studied Comet Hale-Bopp in late 1996. We thought we might be able to spot a plasma tail forming earlier than might be expected. However, when we examined the data, we found no evidence of the plasma tail, which told us that even with a comet of that size, it had to be close enough to the Sun (essentially within about 2 to 2.5 AU of the Sun) before its plasma tail would form. It helped us nail down parts of a descriptive theory we were formulating about how and when and why these glowing tails form when they do as a comet approaches the Sun during its orbit.

Astronomers will keep studying Sedna, and in fact, they have looked at it with other telescopes since its discovery. Expect to see a few more announcements about this frigid world at the frontiers of the solar system!

Exploring Science and the Cosmos

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