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Re: SWAN comet hunting
开云体育Your browser probably isn’t allowing you to access it because it’s http:// and not https://. I think I had to make an exception for the site so that Firefox would open it.? --Rob ? From: [email protected] <[email protected]>
On Behalf Of Miki Kasz via groups.io
Sent: Monday, December 9, 2024 12:40 PM To: [email protected] Subject: EXTERNAL: Re: [comets-ml] SWAN comet hunting ? Site doesn't work for me Temat: Re: [comets-ml] SWAN comet hunting
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Re: SWAN comet hunting
Site doesn't work for me Temat: Re: [comets-ml] SWAN comet hunting Data: 2024-12-09 21:39 Nadawca: "Matson, Rob D. via groups.io" <robert.d.matson@...> Adresat: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>;
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Re: SWAN comet hunting
开云体育Hi Miki, ? From the main page at (note the UNSECURE web address), go to the left column and click on “Summary images (old)”. Then at upper right, click on “COMET TRACKER’S MAPS”. Each date has two images – the first is the regular .gif, and the second is the _rfa.gif version with less area occulted. Note that the GIF movies that they create are of the _rfa.gif images.? --Rob ? From: [email protected] <[email protected]>
On Behalf Of Miki Kasz via groups.io
Sent: Monday, December 9, 2024 12:11 PM To: [email protected] Subject: EXTERNAL: Re: [comets-ml] SWAN comet hunting ? How do i get rfa versions? Temat: Re: [comets-ml] SWAN comet hunting
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Re: SWAN comet hunting
How do i get rfa versions? Temat: Re: [comets-ml] SWAN comet hunting Data: 2024-12-09 21:08 Nadawca: "Matson, Rob D. via groups.io" <robert.d.matson@...> Adresat: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>;
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Re: SWAN comet hunting
开云体育I recommend using the _rfa versions of the images – especially when looking close to the solar occulting area, e.g. swan_ARecl_sm_20241205_0002_rfa.gif. When you do so, you’ll see more unblocked sky and the exceedance you’ve identified will no longer look very compelling.? --Rob ? From: [email protected] <[email protected]>
On Behalf Of grymiki via groups.io
Sent: Monday, December 9, 2024 11:14 AM To: [email protected] Subject: EXTERNAL: Re: [comets-ml] SWAN comet hunting ? swan_ARecl_sm_20241203_0002.gif - x 192 y 311 |
Re: 2015CD60
开云体育Hi Roberto, all, ? Nice job Roberto! ? I can confirm that this object is exhibiting cometary behavior. On images I took yesterday with LCO-Tenerife (0.35-m Cassegrain) it is clearly showing a small condensed coma and a short westward-pointing tail. Attached image is 300-seconds, 5x5 arcminutes, standard orientation (north up, east right), taken December 8 at 23:58 UT. ? Sincerely, Alan ? Object 2015 CD60 is definitely a comet. From images taken on December 2nd (unfortunately analyzed only today) I noticed that the object 2015CD60 (object that I follow together with others to see if it has cometary activity) is definitely a comet with a tail too! These are the data of the object: 2015CD60 Mag. 18.0 for a coma of about 10" with a tail of about 42" in PA 277°. Photo data: Taken with a 369mm Cassegrain reduced to F/6.88 (2493mm focal length) on December 2nd 2024 (mean time 01h12m22s UT) with 46x90s and a limiting magnitude of about 22. Image scale 1".24/pixel north up but slightly tilted to the left by 4° and east therefore to the left. Field of 21'.6x32'.3. I also took it on November 1, 2024 and it showed no activity (it was even more difficult to understand due to the presence of many annoying stars nearby). Regards, Roberto Haver 157 Frasso Sabino ? ? ? ? ? |
Re: SWAN comet hunting
On 12/9/24 11:30, grymiki via groups.io wrote:
And question no. 2 - i have diacritic sign in my name but CBAT email should contain plain ASCII code - it doesn't exist for my signI _think_ the advice given here applies (you may need to check with the CBAT folks) : So for Miko?aj, send Miko\laj. (Ideally, they'd use Unicode. Though perhaps with an alternative name line allowed or required, so that (for example) the discoverer of the comet 2I/Borisov could report "my name is Г. В. Бори?сов, which transliterates to G. V. Borisov." I _would_ want that extra line, since I can't read Chinese, Hebrew, Thai, etc.) -- Bill |
Re: SWAN comet hunting
开云体育My advice is not to send anything to CBAT that only appears in 3 SWAN images; I would consider 4 images a bare minimum. Personally, I don’t see any moving objects that disappear behind the black solar-occulting region in recent images. If the object you’re considering is near pixel X=186, Y=283, then that is the blue supergiant star mu Sagittarii.? --Rob ? From: [email protected] <[email protected]>
On Behalf Of grymiki via groups.io
Sent: Monday, December 9, 2024 8:30 AM To: [email protected] Subject: EXTERNAL: Re: [comets-ml] SWAN comet hunting ? [Edited Message Follows] I think I have found something. The sky wasn't searched in that region and the object is seen in 2-3 images, but it then disappears behind this black thingy covering? Sun on the left. What to do? And question no. 2 - i have diacritic sign in my name but CBAT email should contain plain ASCII code - it doesn't exist for my sign |
Re: 2015CD60
Hi Miko?aj,
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In this case, 2015 CD60 would be formally considered a Jupiter-family comet from a dynamical standpoint (commonly used in the active asteroids literature)--the distinction being that 2015 CD60's Tisserand's parameter (T_J = 2.6) with respect to Jupiter is less than T_J = 3.08 which separates "Jupiter-family comets" (whose orbits come close to Jupiter, loosely speaking) from "active asteroids", whose orbits are less affected by Jupiter.
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K |
2015CD60
Object 2015 CD60 is definitely a comet.
From images taken on December 2nd (unfortunately analyzed only today) I noticed that the object 2015CD60 (object that I follow together with others to see if it has cometary activity) is definitely a comet with a tail too! These are the data of the object: 2015CD60 Mag. 18.0 for a coma of about 10" with a tail of about 42" in PA 277°. Photo data: Taken with a 369mm Cassegrain reduced to F/6.88 (2493mm focal length) on December 2nd 2024 (mean time 01h12m22s UT) with 46x90s and a limiting magnitude of about 22. Image scale 1".24/pixel north up but slightly tilted to the left by 4° and east therefore to the left. Field of 21'.6x32'.3. I also took it on November 1, 2024 and it showed no activity (it was even more difficult to understand due to the presence of many annoying stars nearby). Regards, Roberto Haver 157 Frasso Sabino |
Re: P223bel = COMET 213P-B/VAN NESS
开云体育Hi Sam, Piero, Adrien, all, ? I’m inclined to suspect that this comet has indeed undergone an outburst, or at least some kind of upsurge in brightness, during the fairly recent past, given that it is over a year past perihelion passage and is just now being observed. ? It was clearly fainter this time around than it was in 2017, when I successfully observed it visually on a handful of occasions near m1 ~13.5. I made at least one attempt to recover it via LCO in May 2023, when it was a? month away from opposition and six months away from perihelion, but didn’t detect anything in the images. I’m aware of at least a couple of other unsuccessful recovery attempts by other observers. ? It will be interesting to see what the DECam images reveal. ? ? Sincerely, Alan ? Hi Piero and Adrien, ? It has been officially identified by the MPC as 213P... I'm not 100% sure that identification is correct due to the magnitude difference, but this comet is prone to outbursts so it's hard to say for sure. There are September 2023 DECam images at the comet's expected location which are proprietary until March which would help clear up the confusion. ? If it isn't 213P, it's definitely NOT 213P-B. I calculated an orbit including -B's 2011 observations and these 2024 observations, and there is nothing at the expected position down to at least V=23.5 in 2017 (a full ten magnitudes fainter than the main comet at the time). As best as I can tell -B disintegrated in 2011 (Sekanina models that it separated from the main comet in 2005 shortly before discovery) ? The comet also produced -C and -D fragments which were absorbed even more sparsely in 2011. ? ~Sam ? On Saturday, December 7, 2024 at 11:49:47 AM PST, Sormano Astronomical Observatory <obs2.sormano@...> wrote: ? ? Hi Adrien,
Given the small arc of P223bel and the similarity of the orbits, both possibilities remain open. My choice fell on 213P-B only because, from a quick calculation, the observations of the latter fit better. In any case a more in-depth analysis? surely will be able to solve the problem. ? Regards Piero Sicoli |
Re: P223bel = COMET 213P-B/VAN NESS
Hi Piero and Adrien, It has been officially identified by the MPC as 213P... I'm not 100% sure that identification is correct due to the magnitude difference, but this comet is prone to outbursts so it's hard to say for sure. There are September 2023 DECam images at the comet's expected location which are proprietary until March which would help clear up the confusion. If it isn't 213P, it's definitely NOT 213P-B. I calculated an orbit including -B's 2011 observations and these 2024 observations, and there is nothing at the expected position down to at least V=23.5 in 2017 (a full ten magnitudes fainter than the main comet at the time). As best as I can tell -B disintegrated in 2011 (Sekanina models that it separated from the main comet in 2005 shortly before discovery) The comet also produced -C and -D fragments which were absorbed even more sparsely in 2011. ~Sam
On Saturday, December 7, 2024 at 11:49:47 AM PST, Sormano Astronomical Observatory <obs2.sormano@...> wrote:
Hi Adrien,
As far as I know, in addition to the main one, we only have the B component. The problem to be clarified is whether the observations of PCCP - P223bel - are to be referred to 213P or 213P-B. Given the small arc of P223bel and the similarity of the orbits, both possibilities remain open. My choice fell on 213P-B only because, from a quick calculation, the observations of the latter fit better.
In any case a more in-depth analysis? surely will be able to solve the problem.
?
Regards
Piero Sicoli
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Re: P223bel = COMET 213P-B/VAN NESS
Hi Adrien,
As far as I know, in addition to the main one, we only have the B component. The problem to be clarified is whether the observations of PCCP - P223bel - are to be referred to 213P or 213P-B. Given the small arc of P223bel and the similarity of the orbits, both possibilities remain open. My choice fell on 213P-B only because, from a quick calculation, the observations of the latter fit better.
In any case a more in-depth analysis? surely will be able to solve the problem.
?
Regards
Piero Sicoli |
Re: P223bel = COMET 213P-B/VAN NESS
Hi Piero, Great! Sorry for my na?ve question, I don't know the whole story behind 213P. I see in JPL's SBDB that there is 213P and 213P-B -- i.e. the latter would be a piece of the former, but I don't see any 213P-A. Is the 213P here implicitly the 213P-A? And therefore, is there a second piece waiting to be recovered? Adrien Le sam. 7 déc. 2024, 17:20, Sormano Astronomical Observatory via <obs2.sormano=[email protected]> a écrit?:
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