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Is there a comet approaching earth

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Approaching Comet Predicted to Shine Brighter Than Stars in The Sky

Stargazers should start to get good sightings of the comet in June 2024, though there’s a lot of (educated) guesswork involved here: these celestial objects can be unpredictable in the way their paths develop, and scientists know little about this comet’s properties.

Watch: Green comet makes closest approach to Earth in 50,000 years and you still have time to catch a glimpse

On Jan. 12, Comet C/2022 E3 (ZTF) reached perihelion – its closest approach to the sun. This made a good time to begin looking for the comet at night. Since then, the comet has been seen by people on Earth with the help of telescopes and binoculars.

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A newly-discovered comet made its closest approach to Earth in about 50,000 years on Wednesday. The

Watch: Green comet approaches Earth for the first time in about 50,000 years

A newly-discovered comet made its closest approach to Earth in about 50,000 years on Wednesday. The

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. – An impressive time-lapse video recorded in the Deep South shows the newly-discovered “green comet” that has made its closest approach to Earth in about 50,000 years.

The out-of-this-world video was recorded by Matt Graves Wednesday night over a period of about 45 minutes, and shows the comet, officially named Comet C/2022 E3 (ZTF), shooting across the night sky.

This celestial sighting is a bit like space-speed dating. Astronomers only just learned of Comet C/2022 E3

Rare green comet sighting: Where and when to see it

This celestial sighting is a bit like space-speed dating. Astronomers only just learned of Comet C/2022 E3’s existence, and it will be gone before we know it. Learn how it was discovered and why a naked-eye comet is rare.

According to NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, the green comet was traveling at about 128,000 mph when it made its closest approach to the planet at just over 26 million miles.

Astronomers at the National Science Foundation’s Zwicky Transient Facility (ZTF) in California first detected this moving object in the solar system on March 2, 2022.

On Jan. 12, Comet C/2022 E3 (ZTF) reached perihelion – its closest approach to the sun. This made an excellent time to begin looking for the comet at night. Since then, the comet has been seen by people on Earth with the help of telescopes and binoculars.

During its closest approach to the Earth Wednesday night and Thursday, the celestial wonder can be seen with the naked eye.

And if you didn’t have time to catch a glimpse overnight, you still have some time to check it out – but you need to be fast.

When will Comet C/2022 E3 (ZTF) return?

A newly-discovered comet made its closest approach to Earth in about 50,000 years on Wednesday. The “green comet,” or Comet C/2022 E3, will safely pass by the planet by more than 26 million miles.

ZTF’s Comet was initially thought to make another close pass by Earth in 50,000 years. Astronomers now estimate it could be a few million years before another flyby.

University of Maryland astronomer and ZTF Survey member Ye Quanzhi said scientists would have a better idea of its orbital period after it’s heading outbound to see how its passage through the inner solar system messes with the comet’s orbit.

“It’s safe to say that the comet won’t be back anytime soon,” Quanzhi told FOX Weather via email.

You still have time to catch a glimpse of Comet C/2022 E3 (ZTF)

The images of Comet C/2022 E3 ZTF were captured on Sunday from a telescope in Italy on Jan. 29, 2023. (Courtesy: Gianluca Masi / Virtual Telescope Project)

Timelapse shows rare comet making its approach to Earth

The images of Comet C/2022 E3 ZTF were captured on Sunday from a telescope in Italy on Jan. 29, 2023. (Courtesy: Gianluca Masi / Virtual Telescope Project)

The Virtual Telescope Project, along with Telescope Live, gave stargazers worldwide the opportunity to watch the comet fly by during a live stream on Wednesday night on the Virtual Telescope Project’s webTV page.

If you missed it, don’t worry! You can still check it out on your own.

Thomas Prince, astronomer and director of the W.M. Keck Institute for Space Studies at Caltech, offered some suggestions if you want to see the green comet before it’s gone.

“It has to be a dark sky and moonless in the sky,” Prince said.

Prince said to try and get to an area with as little light pollution as possible, away from city lights.

Even though this is considered a bright “naked-eye” comet, using a pair of binoculars will help. To find the comet, look for a bright fuzzy object.

“It will distinguish itself probably from other stars because it will look a little bit fuzzy compared to other stars,” Prince said.

Prince offered another trick to spotting the comet. On Feb. 10, the comet will be about 1.5 degrees from Mars.

Mars is very bright, and you can just look within one degree around Mars and maybe be able to see it,” Prince said.

If you miss this one, there will be more opportunities to view comets in your lifetime. According to NASA, there are more than 3,700 known comets.

Approaching Comet Predicted to Shine Brighter Than Stars in The Sky

Comet with tail in the night sky

McNaughts Comet photographed in 2007 from South Australia. (John White Photos/Moment/Getty Images)

Make a note of the newly discovered comet with the lengthy name of ​​C/2023 A3 (Tsuchinshan-ATLAS): as it gets closer to the Sun and our planet, it could shine brighter in Earth’s night sky than many stars.

The comet’s nearest approach to the Sun, or perihelion, won’t be until September 28, 2024, before hitting its closest point to Earth a few weeks later on October 13, so you’ve got plenty of time to get your blanket and telescopes organized.

Though estimates are extremely tentative, astronomers are predicting a brightness of magnitude 0.7 at the comet’s perihelion. Keeping in mind numbers lower on the magnitude scale represent brighter objects, with Betelgeuse in the Orion constellation at around 0.42, and Antares – the brightest star in the constellation Scorpio – a little dimmer at a touch over 1.

At its closest point to Earth, the comet’s magnitude could reach an even more dazzling -0.2, which would make it one of the brightest objects in the night sky. Add in the effects of forward scattering, where the dust and ice of the comet reflects the light from the Sun, and we might even reach a -5 magnitude.

Unless its rendezvous with a star doesn’t rip it to shreds before it swings back out on its way into the outer Solar System, that is.

Images showing comet C/2023 A3

It’s also worth bearing in mind that comet brightness is more diffuse than star brightness, as we’re talking about a moving object with (potentially) a tail, rather than a single source of illumination.

The best moments to view C/2023 A3 should be in the days before or after October 13. It’ll appear in the dawn sky near the constellations Hydra and Crater, though be warned, getting a good view in the glare of the sunrise might prove tricky.

Astronomers first spotted C/2023 A3 on January 9, 2023, from the Purple Mountain Observatory in China. It was then thought to be lost before being picked up again by the team at the Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System (ATLAS) telescope in South Africa, on February 22, 2023.

As a result, it gets both institute names in its own name (“tsuchinshan” is Mandarin for “purple mountain”). The C is used for comets on an open trajectory (likely to escape the Sun’s orbit), 2023 is the discovery year, and A3 shows this was the third discovery in the first half of January (B is the second half of January, C the first half of February, and so on).

Comet path chart

Besides its notable brightness, C/2023 A3 is traveling particularly fast: about 180,610 miles or 290,664 kilometers per hour, zooming along on an extended lap of the Solar System calculated to take approximately 80,660 years. Right now, it’s somewhere between the orbits of Saturn and Jupiter.

Stargazers should start to get good sightings of the comet in June 2024, though there’s a lot of (educated) guesswork involved here: these celestial objects can be unpredictable in the way their paths develop, and scientists know little about this comet’s properties.

While the chances are good that we’ll see C/2023 A3 shining bright in the sky next year, there’s not much in the way of comparable comet data to base calculations on. As such, astronomers can’t even say with certainty if the poor old ball of rock and ice will stay intact long enough to make its appointment with the Sun.

Despite the uncertainty, it’s an exciting prospect for astronomers, and we’re likely to hear a lot more about C/2023 A3 over the months ahead.

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