Topic: Astronomy stuff
We already have a Space Nerds thread, but I figured it was more astronautics related.
I'd like this thread to be a place about astronomy itself - theory or practice. Pictures, current events. Buying observation or photography equipment. What to observe and when. Anything.
And I would very much like to open this with the hot topic of the moment: the comet ISON.
Discovered in September 2012, ISON (named after its discover, the International Scientific Optical Network - its proper designation is C/2012 S1) is a sungrazing comet currently getting very close to the Sun. Scientists fear it might not survive it. But if it does, it could very well become the comet of the century, looking even brighter than Comet Lovejoy did back in 2011. Just picture that.
Here's, however, an (already) amazing picture of it an astronomer made a week and a half ago:
What a beauty.
It's been observable to the naked eye for a few days, but you need a very clear sky in order to do that. I got up at 6:30am last Saturday to see it, and nothing showed up - to my eyes or my camera sensor. A big city like Montpellier is not the best place to observe celestial objects, though. If ISON survives, I'll go shoot it on a mountaintop back home or something.
It's still getting closer to the Sun as we speak, and it'll be at its closest next Thursday (1.2 million kilometers; that's awfully close). From that moment on, and provided the comet is big enough not to crack open when licking the Sun's corona, the actual show should begin... Although we'll probably have to wait until December 6th to see it. Before that, the comet will still be drowned in the morning lights.
Last edited by Saniss (2013-11-25 23:27:07)