A place were I can write...
My simple blog of pictures of travel, friends, activities and the Universe we live in as we go slowly around the Sun.
October 17, 2013
In the days of the comet...
In order top to bottom this
celestial snapshot features Comet ISON, planet Mars, and Regulus, alpha star
of the constellation Leo, in the same frame. The scene spans about 2 degrees
near the eastern horizon in early morning skies of October 15. Closest of the
three, the much heralded
Comet ISON (C/2012 S1) is by far the faintest at 14 light-minutes (1.7 AU)
away. Mars is only slightly farther from our fair planet. About 16.5 light
minutes (2 AU) away its normal ruddy color is washed
out in the exposure. Regulus outshines both comet and planet from a distance of
75 light-years. Just above Regulus, the very faint smudge of light is actually
the Leo I dwarf galaxy, 800,000 light-years away and almost lost in the glare of
the bluish hued bright star. Comet ISON is expected
to grow brighter, though. How
bright is still not clear, but not as bright as a Full Moon in night skies.
Estimated to be 1 to 4 kilometers in diameter, ISON's nucleus might substantially
survive its very close encounter with the Sun on November 28. If so, the
comet will climb back above the eastern horizon in planet Earth's northern
hemisphere before
dawn in early December.
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