Comet ISON is now inside the
orbit of Mercury. It’s on the last leg of its journey sunward, a
journey that began at least a million years ago.
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| Gerald Rhemann in Namibia in SW Africa captured this photo of Comet
ISON on November 21, 2013, one week before its encounter with the sun. Visit Gerald’s website Sky Vistas. Used with permission.
Date: 21.11.2013 UT 02h49mThank you, Gerald!
Location: Farm Tivoli, Namibia/SW Africa
Telescope: ASA 12″ N f 3.8 Astrograph
Camera: FLI ML 8300
Mount: ASA DDM85
Exposure time: LRGB 3/2/2/2 min.
ISON is considered a sun-diving comet. At its closest, it will skim very close to the sun, just 724,000 miles (1,165,000 km) above the sun’s surface.
If Comet ISON is able to sweep past the sun and head back toward the outer solar system again without breaking up, it may become visible to the eye alone in the predawn sky in early December.
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| Our friend Annie Lewis in Madrid, Spain caught Comet ISON on Saturday
morning, November 23, near the planets Mercury and Saturn. Thank you,
Annie! Notice that the comet is very low in eastern predawn twilight.
Annie’s camera caught it, but your eye may not.
On Sunday morning, November 24, the comet will still be near Saturn and Mercury, which, by the way, are poised for a close conjunction on November 25 and 26.
Will you be able to see the comet? You’ll need a pristine sky – clear
all the way to the horizon – and binoculars to scan near the planets.
Here
is Comet ISON Monday morning, November 25. See how it’s even farther
below Mercury and Saturn than on Sunday? It’s heading toward the sun!
It’ll come closest to the sun on November 28. If it survives, it might
then become a bright object in our predawn sky.
If
Comet ISON survives its close sweep past the sun, it should emerge back
into our eastern predawn sky in early December. Fingers crossed!
Close pairing of Saturn and Mercury dawn November 25 and 26