Weekly Information about Bright Comets (2012 Sept. 8: North)

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Updated on September 8, 2012
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Best time and the azimuth, altitude (A,h) are at lat. 35 deg in the Northern Hemisphere.
Azimuth indicates 0 for south, 90 for west, 180 for north, 270 for east.

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* C/2011 F1 ( LINEAR )

Now it is so bright as 10.4 mag (Sept. 6, Juan Jose Gonzalez). Getting lower graudally in the evening sky. It will be unobservable in late September in the Southern Hemisphere, or in mid October in the Northern Hemisphere. In the Southern Hemisphere, it will appear in the morning sky at 9 mag in 2013 February, then it keeps observable in good condition while fading slowly. In the Northern Hemisphere, it is hardly observable after 2013.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8  14 44.87   15 30.7   2.811   2.369    54   10.4  19:43 ( 87, 31)  
Sept.15  14 53.34   12 28.3   2.819   2.316    50   10.3  19:32 ( 85, 28)  

* 185P/Petriew

It brightened rapidly. Now it is very bright as 10.7 mag (Aug. 26, Man-To Hui). It has a large coma. It keeps observable in the morning sky all through this apparition, although it locates somewhat low. It keeps bright at 10-11 mag until mid September.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8   7 55.57   14 31.3   1.349   1.005    47   11.4   4:11 (270, 26)  
Sept.15   8 19.76   12  1.6   1.395   1.046    48   11.9   4:17 (273, 26)  

* C/2011 R1 ( McNaught )

Now it is so bright as 12.2 mag (Aug. 24, Chris Wyatt). It is expected to be observable at 11-13 mag for a long time from 2012 summer to 2013 summer. It is not observable until 2013 January in the Northern Hemisphere. In the Southern Hemisphere, it will be extremely low from October to December.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8  12 25.35  -64 58.3   2.220   2.138    72   11.5  19:43 ( 31,-34)  
Sept.15  12 59.06  -61 54.3   2.300   2.120    67   11.6  19:32 ( 34,-31)  

* C/2011 L4 ( PanSTARRS )

It is expected to be a great comet of -1 mag in 2013 spring. Now it is 11.8 mag (Aug. 18, Jakub Cerny). Brightening faster than originally expected. In 2012, it keeps observable until October in the Southern Hemisphere. In the Northern Hemisphere, it will be unobservable soon. Then it keeps unobservable for a long time until 2013 March, when the comet will appear as a 0-mag great comet. By the way, Juan Jose Gonzalez reported it extremely bright as 9.5 mag visually on Aug. 21.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8  15  1.47  -25 40.7   3.571   3.274    64   11.9  19:43 ( 51,  8)  
Sept.15  15  3.65  -26  1.3   3.587   3.184    58   11.8  19:32 ( 53,  6)  

* C/2009 P1 ( Garradd )

It kept as bright as 6-7 mag for a long time from 2011 summer to 2012 spring. Now it is not observable. It will appear in the morning sky again at 12.5 mag in October.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8   9 53.93    6  8.7   4.510   3.567    18   12.3   4:11 (260, -3)  
Sept.15   9 57.11    4 59.9   4.532   3.635    23   12.4   4:17 (265,  2)  

* 260P/2012 K2 ( McNaught )

First return of a new periodic comet which brightened up to 14 mag in 2005. It brightened very rapidly and became much brighter than originally expected. Now it is very bright as 11.0 mag (Sept. 6, Juan Jose Gonzalez). It keeps observable in excellent condition at 11-13 mag from summer to autumn.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8   1 58.62   20 41.0   0.634   1.498   130   12.9   2:50 (  0, 76)  
Sept.15   2  1.96   24 36.6   0.611   1.497   134   12.8   2:26 (  0, 80)  

* C/2011 UF305 ( LINEAR )

It brightened much faster than expected. Now it is so bright as 10.3 mag (Aug. 22, Juan Jose Gonzalez). In the Northern Hemisphere, it keeps observable at 11-13 mag in good condition until early 2013. Although it becomes extremely low in August, it will be getting higher again in the morning sky after September. In the Southern Hemisphere, it is not observable until late 2012.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8   9 58.46   41 38.7   2.900   2.211    39   13.0   4:11 (230, 16)  
Sept.15  10  1.93   39 45.2   2.876   2.233    42   13.1   4:17 (235, 20)  

* C/2012 CH17 ( MOSS )

Now it is 15.4 mag (Aug. 11, Hidetaka Sato). However, it is extremely diffuse. The nuclear magnitude is fainter than 19 mag. Maybe the comet has been disintegrated, and will disappear soon. It keeps observable for a long time until December, but it keeps locating low in the evening after this.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8  14 22.52    4 46.4   1.760   1.332    48   13.5  19:43 ( 81, 21)  
Sept.15  14 45.01    1 23.1   1.746   1.311    48   13.4  19:32 ( 77, 20)  

* C/2010 S1 ( LINEAR )

Now it is 13.0 mag (Aug. 21, Juan Jose Gonzalez). It keeps bright at 13-14 mag for a long time until 2014. It keeps observable for a long time in the Northern Hemisphere. It is not observable in the Southern Hemisphere.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8  21 28.65   54 19.0   5.650   6.167   116   13.6  22:16 (180, 71)  
Sept.15  21 18.75   53  7.8   5.627   6.153   117   13.6  21:38 (180, 72)  

* C/2009 F4 ( McNaught )

Now it is bright as 13.0 mag (Aug. 16, Jakub Cerny). It keeps bright as 13-14 mag for a long time after this until 2013. It is not observable in the Northern Hemisphere, but it is observable in good condition in the Southern Hemisphere.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8   4 58.92  -55 13.2   5.568   5.757    95   13.7   4:11 (346, -3)  
Sept.15   4 56.39  -55 45.4   5.556   5.774    97   13.7   4:17 (351, -2)  

* (596) Scheila

Big asteroid discovered in 1906. It suddenly showed the cometary activity on Dec. 11, 2010, probably due to an impact of a small object. Now it is 11.9 mag (May 29, Marco Goiato). It has already turned to be stellar.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8  16 40.31  -29 11.0   2.335   2.495    87   13.8  19:43 ( 30, 19)  
Sept.15  16 49.74  -29 38.3   2.428   2.501    82   13.9  19:32 ( 32, 17)  

* C/2006 S3 ( LONEOS )

Now it is so bright as 11.7 mag (Aug. 17, Carlos Labordena). It will be unobservable in late September in the Northern Hemisphere, or in mid October in the Southern Hemisphere. But it will be observable at 13-14 mag in good condition again in 2013.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8  15 17.62  -13  1.0   5.593   5.247    65   14.1  19:43 ( 57, 20)  
Sept.15  15 16.95  -13 14.9   5.720   5.259    58   14.2  19:32 ( 60, 17)  

* 29P/Schwassmann-Wachmann 1

Now it is 12.9 mag (Aug. 14, Jakub Cerny). It is not observable already in the Northern Hemisphere. It will be unobservable soon also in the Southern Hemisphere.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8  12 44.44  -13  4.1   7.095   6.249    30   14.2  19:43 ( 80, -9)  
Sept.15  12 49.18  -13 31.7   7.143   6.248    25   14.2  19:32 ( 82,-12)  

* C/2012 J1 ( Catalina )

Now it is bright and visible visually at 13.5 mag (Aug. 21, Juan Jose Gonzalez). It keeps observable in good condition at 14 mag for a long time until winter. It locates somewhat low in the Southern Hemisphere.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8  23 48.96   39 40.0   2.499   3.277   133   14.5   0:41 (180, 85)  
Sept.15  23 47.05   39 14.8   2.446   3.259   137   14.4   0:11 (180, 86)  

* 246P/2010 V2 ( NEAT )

Now it is so bright as 12.4 mag (Aug. 17, Carlos Labordena). It will be too low to observe in the evening sky soon. But it will be observable at 12-14 mag in good condition again in 2013. However, it locates somewhat low in the Northern Hemisphere in 2013.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8  14  3.17   -4 23.5   3.603   2.980    45   14.5  19:43 ( 76, 11)  
Sept.15  14 12.24   -5 38.8   3.656   2.970    40   14.5  19:32 ( 76,  9)  

* C/2012 K5 ( LINEAR )

Now it is bright and visible visually at 13.7 mag (Aug. 21, Juan Jose Gonzalez). It is expected to approach to the earth and to be observable at 9-10 mag in good condition in winter. The condition is good in the Northern Hemisphere. In the Southern Hemisphere, it will be unobservable after this. But it will become observable in good condition after 2013 January.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8  14 59.83   44  9.8   1.890   1.701    63   14.7  19:43 (120, 45)  
Sept.15  14 52.64   43 15.4   1.880   1.627    59   14.5  19:32 (120, 40)  

* 78P/Gehrels 2

It kept as bright as 11-12 mag for a long time from 2011 autumn to 2012 spring. It is appearing in the morning sky now. It keeps observable in good condition until next spring while the comet will be fading gradually.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8   9  2.55   11 50.7   3.533   2.723    31   15.0   4:11 (263, 10)  
Sept.15   9 13.03   10 59.0   3.513   2.755    35   15.2   4:17 (267, 15)  

* C/2011 O1 ( LINEAR )

Now it is 14.5 mag (July 27, Jakub Cerny). In the Southern Hemisphere, it will be observable at 15-16 mag in good condition for a long time until 2013 summer. It is not observable at all in the Northern Hemisphere.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8  16 24.43  -81 14.0   3.692   3.895    94   15.2  19:43 (  6,-28)  
Sept.15  16 24.99  -80 59.5   3.759   3.898    90   15.3  19:32 (  7,-28)  

* 168P/Hergenrother

It brightened very rapidly. Now it is very bright as 14.9 mag (Aug. 26, Katsumi Yoshimoto). It will approach to the earth down to 0.4 A.U., and will be observable in good condition as bright as 14-15 mag in September and October. By the way, Juan Jose Gonzalez reported it extremely bright as 11.2 mag visually on Sept. 6.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8   0 42.36   -0  3.4   0.462   1.440   155   15.4   1:34 (  0, 55)  
Sept.15   0 35.13    5 40.4   0.437   1.428   162   15.3   1:00 (  0, 60)  

* 96P/Machholz 1

It approached to the sun down to 0.12 A.U. on July 14, and brightened up to 7.8 mag (July 22, Juan Jose Gonzalez). It was still bright as 10.5 mag in mid August (Aug. 21, Juan Jose Gonzalez). But now, it is fading rapidly in the evening low sky.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8  15  6.77   -5 10.7   1.571   1.394    60   15.4  19:43 ( 65, 23)  
Sept.15  15 25.80   -8  1.9   1.751   1.510    59   16.1  19:32 ( 62, 22)  

* 58P/Jackson-Neujmin

This comet brightened up to 10 mag in outburst in 1995, however, it became lost after that. The condition of this apparition is bad. It was not observable around the perihelion passage. But it is appearing in the morning sky now. However, it is not detected, fainter than 19.0 mag (Aug. 11, Hidetaka Sato).

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8   7 19.49   11  5.6   2.549   2.161    56   15.7   4:11 (278, 31)  
Sept.15   7 30.02   10 28.7   2.530   2.214    60   16.0   4:17 (283, 35)  

* 262P/2012 K7 ( McNaught-Russell )

First return of a new periodic comet discovered in 1994. Brightening rapidly. Now it is 16.9 mag (Aug. 18, E. Bryssinck). It will brighten up to 13.5 mag and will be observable in good condition from autumn to winter.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8  19 16.25   28 54.0   1.042   1.726   114   16.1  20:05 (  0, 84)  
Sept.15  19 16.92   27 12.1   1.011   1.668   111   15.9  19:38 (  0, 82)  

* C/2011 A3 ( Gibbs )

Jakub Cerny reported the comet brightened in late July. Now it is 14.5 mag, a bit brighter than this ephemeris still now (Aug. 20, Jakub Cerny). It will be observable in good condition in the Southern Hemisphere while fading gradually after this. It will locate somewhat low in the Northern Hemisphere.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8  22 57.99  -28 27.8   2.743   3.692   157   16.2  23:46 (  0, 27)  
Sept.15  22 54.41  -29  3.9   2.825   3.746   152   16.4  23:15 (  0, 26)  

* C/2012 L1 ( LINEAR )

Now it is 16.1 mag (Aug. 20, Hiroshi Abe). It will brighten up to 15 mag from autum to winter. In the Northern Hemisphere, it keeps observable for a long time until the comet fades out. It is not observable in the Southern Hemisphere, except for 2013 spring, but the comet locates extremely low only.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8  13 34.51   69 59.8   2.763   2.572    68   16.3  19:43 (155, 36)  
Sept.15  13 32.53   69  3.7   2.716   2.536    69   16.2  19:32 (154, 34)  

* P/2012 NJ ( La Sagra )

Looks almost asteroidal. But it has a very faint tail. It passed near by the earth, and brightened up to 13.9 mag (July 22, Artyom Novichonok). Now it is fading, but still bright as 15.0 mag (Aug. 19, Seiichi Yoshida). It keeps observable in excellent condition in the Northern Hemisphere. It locates extremely low in the Southern Hemisphere.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8  18  5.79   40 55.8   1.300   1.742    97   16.2  19:43 (125, 79)  
Sept.15  17 57.98   39 46.4   1.444   1.803    93   16.5  19:32 (113, 75)  

* C/2012 L2 ( LINEAR )

Now it is 16.6 mag (Aug. 26, V. Gerke, A. Novichonok). It is expected to brighten up to 10 mag from winter to spring in 2013. In the Northern Hemisphere, it keeps observable in good condition until 2013 April. It is not observable now in the Southern Hemisphere. It will become observable after 2013 April, but it keeps locating low.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8   2 14.04   88 35.0   3.342   3.411    85   16.4   3:12 (180, 36)  
Sept.15   0 23.41   89 38.9   3.234   3.342    87   16.3   1:16 (180, 35)  

* C/2012 A2 ( LINEAR )

Now it is 16.0 mag (Aug. 23, A. Diepvens)。It brightens up to 16 mag from autumn to winter. It keeps observable in good condition for a long time until the comet fades out in the Northern Hemisphere. It is not observable until 2013 summer in the Southern Hemisphere. By the way, Juan Jose Gonzalez reported it extremely bright as 10.7 mag visually on Sept. 6.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8   9 43.63   64 27.3   3.962   3.577    60   16.5   4:11 (209, 29)  
Sept.15   9 49.31   65 35.2   3.872   3.568    65   16.5   4:17 (209, 32)  

* 71P/Clark

The condition of this apparition is bad, and it was not observable around the perihelion passage. Now it is 16.5 mag (Aug. 25, Yasukazu Ikari). It will be fading after this, and will be fainter than 18 mag in late October.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8   2  5.66    2 38.2   1.926   2.729   134   16.8   2:57 (  0, 58)  
Sept.15   2  1.59    2 15.1   1.902   2.767   142   16.9   2:26 (  0, 57)  

* P/2011 N1 ( ASH )

It was observed at 17 mag in 2011 autumn. It will be observable at 17 mag in good condition again from autumn to winter in 2012. It locates low in the Southern Hemisphere.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8   6 13.90   21  4.1   3.099   2.954    72   17.2   4:11 (278, 50)  
Sept.15   6 21.26   21 53.5   3.019   2.968    77   17.1   4:17 (282, 55)  

* C/2008 S3 ( Boattini )

Now it is 17.3 mag (Aug. 25, V. Gerke, A. Novichonok). It keeps 17 mag for a long time from 2009 to 2013.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8  22 52.16   12 18.1   7.520   8.482   161   17.2  23:40 (  0, 67)  
Sept.15  22 47.06   11 48.3   7.536   8.496   161   17.2  23:07 (  0, 67)  

* 152P/Helin-Lawrence

Now it is 16.6 mag (Aug. 20, Hiroshi Abe). It tends to brighten after the perihelion passage. It keeps observable at 16-17 mag from 2012 to 2013. It locates somewhat low in the Northern Hemisphere.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8  16 31.82  -21 13.3   3.075   3.134    83   17.2  19:43 ( 36, 24)  
Sept.15  16 38.95  -21 43.5   3.173   3.138    78   17.2  19:32 ( 38, 23)  

* 261P/2012 K4 ( Larson )

First return of a new periodic comet discovered in 2005. Now it is 16.7 mag (Aug. 16, Yasukazu Ikari). It will be observable in excellent condition at 17-18 mag until November.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8  23 19.72    5 31.1   1.196   2.192   168   17.2   0:12 (  0, 61)  
Sept.15  23 14.96    5 22.6   1.191   2.189   170   17.2  23:35 (  0, 60)  

* 160P/LINEAR

Although it was extremely faint as 20.0 mag on May 27 (Hidetaka Sato), it brightened rapidly. Now it is 17.4 mag (Aug. 16, Yasukazu Ikari). It keeps observable in good condition at 17 mag from summer to autumn.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8  23 28.58    5 14.9   1.073   2.068   167   17.3   0:21 (  0, 60)  
Sept.15  23 21.74    6 15.8   1.068   2.067   170   17.2  23:41 (  0, 61)  

* C/2010 G2 ( Hill )

It brightened up to 10 mag from autumn to winter in 2011. Now it is appearing in the morning sky again in the Southern Hemisphere. It has already faded down to 17.5 mag (Aug. 16, Jakub Cerny). It keeps observable in good condition while fading graudlaly after this. It will be hardly observable in the Northern Hemisphere.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8   5  5.83  -33 13.3   4.319   4.492    93   17.5   4:11 (337, 17)  
Sept.15   5  4.91  -35 15.6   4.313   4.551    97   17.5   4:17 (345, 18)  

* C/2012 C1 ( McNaught )

Now it is 18.0 mag (May 27, K. Hills). In the Southern Hemisphere, it keeps observable at 17 mag in good condition for a long time from 2012 to 2013. It is not observable at all in the Northern Hemisphere.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8   7  7.25  -51 20.3   5.115   4.976    76   17.5   4:11 (328,-10)  
Sept.15   7  9.65  -53 19.1   5.070   4.964    78   17.5   4:17 (333, -8)  

* P/2012 O3 ( McNaught )

Now it is 16.8 mag (Aug. 26, Catalina Sky Survey). It keeps 17.5 mag until September. It is observable in excellent condition in the Southern Hemisphere. But it locates somewhat low in the Northern Hemisphere.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8  21 25.71  -16 41.6   0.656   1.619   152   17.7  22:14 (  0, 39)  
Sept.15  21 25.72  -13 38.4   0.694   1.632   147   17.8  21:46 (  0, 42)  

* P/1997 C1 ( Gehrels )

First return of a new periodic comet discovered in 1997 at 17 mag. It is expected to keep 17 mag for a long time from 2012 to 2014. The ephemeris says it is already 18 mag, but it has not been recovered yet. Toru Yusa reported that the comet was not detected, fainter than 19.5 mag, on July 18.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8   2 23.86   15 24.8   3.365   4.051   126   17.8   3:15 (  0, 70)  
Sept.15   2 23.35   15 20.4   3.270   4.032   133   17.7   2:47 (  0, 70)  

* 65P/Gunn

It brightened up to 12 mag in 2010. Now the comet is around the aphelion. But it will be observable at 17.5 mag in good condition from autumn to winter.

Date(TT)  R.A. (2000) Decl.   Delta     r    Elong.  m1   Best Time(A, h)  
Sept. 8   4 42.47   20 32.0   4.361   4.538    93   17.9   4:11 (303, 67)  
Sept.15   4 43.98   20 39.2   4.262   4.548   100   17.8   4:17 (319, 72)  

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