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Wednesday, 20 August 2014

Australian amateur Terry Lovejoy discovers new comet



C/2014 Q2 (Lovejoy)

© Alain Maury and Joaquin Fabrega

The fuzzy object at center is new comet C/2014 Q2 (Lovejoy) discovered by Australian amateur astronomer Terry Lovejoy.



It's confirmed! Australian amateur astronomer


Terry Lovejoy

just discovered his fifth comet,


C/2014 Q2 (Lovejoy)

. He found it August 17th using a Celestron C8 fitted with a CCD camera at his roll-off roof observatory in Brisbane, Australia.


C/2014 Q2 (Lovejoy)_1

© Terry Lovejoy

Image triplet taken by Terry Lovejoy of his comet discovery. The comet moves slightly counterclockwise around the larger fuzzy spot over the time frame.



"I take large sets of image triplets, i.e 3 images per star field and use software to find moving objects," said Lovejoy. "The software I use outputs suspects that I check manually by eye."


Most of what pops up on the camera are asteroids, known comets, or false alarms but not this time. Lovejoy's latest find is a faint, fuzzy object in the constellation Puppis in the morning sky.


C/2014 Q2 (Lovejoy)_2

© Stellarium

Sky as seen from central South America showing the approximate location of the new comet (purple circle) on August 19 in Puppis near the bright star Canopus. The view shows the sky facing southeast just before the start of dawn.



Glowing a dim magnitude +15, the new comet will be a southern sky object until later this fall when it swings quickly northward soon around the time of perihelion or closest approach to the sun. Lovejoy's find needs more observations to better refine its orbit, but based on preliminary data,


Maik Meyer

, founder of the


Comets Mailing List

, calculates a January 2, 2015 perihelion.


C/2014 Q2 (Lovejoy)_3

© Jean-François and Alain Maury

Another photo of C/2014 Q2 taken on August 19, 2014.



On that date, it will be a healthy 84 million miles from the sun, but one month earlier on December 7, the comet could pass just 6.5 million miles from Earth and be well placed for viewing in amateur telescopes.


Everything's still a little up in the air right now, so these times and distances are likely to change as fresh observations pour in. Take all predictions with a major grain of salt for the moment.


C/2014 Q2 (Lovejoy)_4

You might remember some of Terry's earlier comets. Comet Lovejoy (C/2011 W3), a


Kreutz sungrazer

discovered in November 2011, passed just 87,000 miles above the sun's surface. Many astronomers thought it wouldn't survive the sun's heat, yet amazingly, although much of its nucleus burned off, enough material survived to produce a spectacular tail.


Terry Lovejoy

© LovejoySS

Terry Lovejoy



More recently, Comet Lovejoy (C/2013 R1) thrilled observers as it climbed to naked eye brightness last November, managing to do the impossible at the time and draw our eyes away from Comet ISON.


Congratulations Terry on your new find! May it wax brightly this fall.


* Update

: The latest orbit calculation from the Minor Planet Center based on 24 observations now puts perihelion at 164.6 million miles (265 million km) on February 14, 2015. Closest approach to Earth of 93.2 million miles (150 million km) will occur in January.




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