Kelly Beatty
OBSERVING BLOG by Kelly Beatty

Bright Prospects for Comet Elenin?

It doesn't look like much now — just a tiny, 19th-magnitude smudge tucked away in southwestern Virgo — but a newly discovered comet could become something special 10 months from now.

Comet Elenin at 19th magnitude
Comet Elenin (C/2010 X1) appears as a tiny, faint smudge in this stack of four 300-second exposures taken on December 11, 2010, with the 1.5-m reflector at Maidanak Observatory. The quadrupled stars are due to the comet's motion between exposures.
Aleksei Sergeyev / Artyom Novichonok
Comet Elenin (C/2010 X1) made its debut on December 10th when Leonid Elenin, an observer in Lyubertsy, Russia, remotely acquired four 4-minute-long images using an 18-inch (45-cm) telescope at the ISON-NM observatory near Mayhill, New Mexico. Follow-up images by Aleksei Sergeyev and Artyom Novichonok at Maidanak Observatory in Uzbekistan revealed more about the new find: it had a teardrop-shaped, very diffuse coma just 6 arcseconds across and a tiny tail.

What's gotten hearts beating a little faster since the discovery is that Comet Elenin is still more than 4 astronomical units (375 million miles) from the Sun and headed inbound. It's still early, and the calculated orbit is certain to change in the weeks ahead as more position measurements are made, but right now it appears that the comet's perihelion will occur well inside Earth's orbit, about 0.45 a.u. (42 million miles) from the Sun, next September 5th.

Right now, odds are that Comet Elenin will become an easy target for binoculars around mid-August and reach naked-eye visibility for a couple of weeks around perihelion. The comet's elongation from the Sun shrinks to just 1° following perihelion, but soon thereafter the comet gets enough separate to position itself nicely for viewing in the predawn sky.

Leonid Elenin
Amateur astronomer (and comet discoverer) Leonid Elenin lives near Moscow and is an accomplished optician who likes to observe asteroids and variable stars.
Tenagra Observatories
Moreover, it's traveling very near the ecliptic plane, and as it sweeps close to the Sun its sky location won't stray far from the ecliptic until mid-September, when the path arcs slowly northwestward through Leo. That's a plus for skywatchers in the Northern Hemisphere.

Finally, because Comet Elenin passes between the Sun and Earth, there's a chance its dust tail might "light up" (via forward-scattered light) due to the large Sun-comet-Earth angle and put on a really good show. The last interloper to do this, Comet McNaught, dazzled southern skygazers in January 2007.

I'll update this story once the calculated orbit settles down, so please check back for the latest details.

Posted by Kelly Beatty, December 24, 2010
related content: Celestial events
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First comments (from 15)

elenin

Posted by rick December 25, 2010 At 04:39 AM PST
Wow- a Christmas Eve tease for a possible comet delight late next summer. May the orbit gods shine upon us earthlings!


Good Going, Leonid!!

Posted by Patrick Miller December 27, 2010 At 06:30 AM PST
This is great news, Leonid. Congratulations!!


Comet Elenin

Posted by Richard Hamelin January 1, 2011 At 09:53 AM PST
Thanks for the earley warning. I have been wanting to buy a telescope.


Comet Elenin

Posted by bill vitale January 15, 2011 At 07:20 AM PST
Congratulations Leonid, and thank you for your perseverance. Too bad countries can not work together as well as stargazers appear to do.


Thanks!

Posted by Leonid Elenin January 20, 2011 At 09:23 AM PST
Thanks to all! I hope what this comet will be bright. Perhaps, forward-scattering phenomena will be assist. And small correction - I'm not a optician.


Any up dates?

Posted by Bill February 5, 2011 At 12:15 PM PST
Cool find any updates as of late?


Comet Elenin

Posted by Graham February 10, 2011 At 03:02 AM PST
Above it says right now it appears that the comet's perihelion will occur well inside Earth's orbit, about 0.45 a.u. (42 million miles) from the Sun, next September 5th. On http://ssd.jpl.nasa.gov/sbdb.cgi?sstr=C%2F2010%20X1;orb=1;cad=0;cov=0;log=0#orb if you can view Java and let the Java image develop and use the fast forward >> button till the Date bottom Right get to Oct 18th 2011 then use the || to stop the image progressing the distance between Elenin and Earth is only 0.241 AU roughly 23,238,971.75 miles from Earth is that a safe distance, if it is a decent size Comet. or will it Double the Sun's pull on the Earth, can Earth stand this one day event. maybe my Math's is not that good and is this graph website a good one. Graham.


orbital arc of 68 days

Posted by Kevin Heider February 16, 2011 At 11:47 AM PST
With an orbital arc of 68 days, it now appears that this comet will have a barycentric epoch 2020 (when it is beyond the strong influence of the planets) orbital period of ~10,000 years with aphelion around 940AU. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C/2010_X1 -- Kevin Heider


~10k yr period

Posted by Kevin Heider March 10, 2011 At 01:48 PM PST
Elenin, Leonid "Influence of giant planets on the orbit of comet C/2010 X1" http://spaceobs.org/en/2011/03/07/vliyanie-planet-gigantov-na-orbitu-komety-c2010-x1-elenin/


Lunar Occultation Sunday Night

Posted by John Van Allen March 15, 2011 At 11:55 AM PDT
Using an antique Keuffel & Esser transit screwed to a 3.5" pipe leaning over at an angle equal to my latitude and lying on the ground to look up through the 40mm scope I was able to get a very good and confortable view of this occultation. We measured a difference of 6 seconds (later than the prediction for disappearance) and 53 seconds (later than the prediction for reappearance) from our location prediction (DO141) in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. This was the only optical device available to me but I felt that the disappearance time was very accurate. The reappearance was harder due to the brightness of the moon but we feel it was within 3 0r 4 seconds. Being off the beaten track we hope the data may be useful. The star was mu Gem (tejat)


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