Observation Notes
A couple unsuccessful attempts to view this comet from home at sunrise and sunset the last couple days, lead me to drive up to Switzer Mesa after work today for a better horizon. Finding the comet was not easy in the sherbet orange twilight. I scanned the horizon for about ten minutes with my 10 x 50 binoculars before finally spotting it. Once spotted, it seemed very obvious. A frightfully cold wind, and the fact I didn’t bring my tripod mount for the binoculars meant I wasn’t getting the steadiest views propping them against the car. It was still a beautiful sight.
The coma was soft-edged with a broad profile of luminosity. The tail fanned gracefully away from the blunt, parabolic nose, fading away what I estimated to be about a half degree from the coma. The tail seemed brightest along its eastern edge with a brighter core to the tail that favored the eastern half of the fan. I wasn’t equipped for a proper sketch, and time was very short, so I made a contour diagram and reproduced it digitally in Adobe Photoshop at home using the diagram as a reference.
While I was observing it, my cell phone rang, and Bill Ferris was on the other end asking what I was up to. “I’m out at Switzer Mesa, freezing my butt off, checking out this comet,” I told him. He mentioned he was seeing the coma naked eye, and asked if I had tried it. I gave it a shot, but couldn’t pick it out. After hanging up, I got my stargazing glasses and gave it another try. With the glasses on, it showed up very subtly near the ragged line of trees along the horizon. I also grabbed a few shots with my camera and managed to pick out the comet in four of the images. The best one–which still isn’t great–is shown below. Hover your mouse over the image to show a contrast-enhanced version.
Move mouse over image to view contrast-enhanced version.
Subject | C/2006 P1 (McNaught) |
Classification | Comet |
Position* | Aquila: 01:00 UT – [RA: 19:24:17.9 / Dec: -09:06:53] |
Size | Tail: ~.5° |
Brightness | ~ -1 vMag |
Date/Time | January 8, 2007 – 6:00 PM MST (January 9, 2007 – 01:00 UT) |
Observing Loc. | Switzer Mesa – Flagstaff, AZ |
Instrument | 10 x 50 Binoculars |
Eyepieces/Mag. | – |
Conditions | Clear, breezy |
Seeing | – |
Transparency | ~ Mag 1.0 + NELM |
*Sources | Starry Nights Pro Plus v. 5.8, Aerith.net |
Hi Great website just found it 🙂
Hope you don’t mind me adding it to my Astronomy Blog Roll List. Keep up the good work and hope you get to see C/2006 P1 (McNaught) again and have yet to see it
MS
Hi Mark, with schedule issues, and incoming weather, I plan to try it again Friday or Saturday evening. It will be much closer, and westward of the Sun by then, but possibly even brighter, so I hope there’s a fair chance of spotting it again.
I hope you get some enjoyable observing in 2007!
Thanks for the quick reply.
I saw the comet myself tonight never seen anything like it before hopefully clear skys again tommrow for a better planned observation.
Mark
dear
people,
please send me pics/ information that you consider interesting
I do not have any kind of professional nowledge but , but its a fascinating subject
bless you
Ed