Comet Pons-Brooks Visual Report - Wed eve 3/27/24

Discuss our solar system.
Post Reply
User avatar
broadwater Canada
Earth Ambassador
Articles: 0
Offline
Posts: 3
Joined: Sun Sep 17, 2023 11:34 pm
Location: Niagara Falls, Ontario
Status:
Offline

Comet Pons-Brooks Visual Report - Wed eve 3/27/24

#1

Post by broadwater »


I took my 15x70 tripod mounted binoculars and my little Astroscan to a reasonably dark sky site in southern Ontario, Canada to observe Comet Pons-Brooks. Skies were clear, and air was cool and dry, with a bit of wind. I had clear view of southwestern horizon. Comet became visible around 830pm local time, and peak viewing was at 9pm.

It wasn't very difficult to find the comet, but the appearance is underwhelming. Coma was visible and I caught a very faint glimpse of a small tail at times. Frankly, from all I have read about this comet coming into its best at the end of March, it was a letdown. Thanks to Steve who posted his report here on the board yesterday for helping me reset my expectations.

Still, got a good look at some of winter's fading treats under clear skies, and any night out with the telescope is a good night. But anyone expecting a breathtaking comet will be let down. Comet NEOWISE in 2020 put on a much better show.


Dark Skies,

Broadwater
User avatar
Graeme1858 Great Britain
Co-Administrator
Co-Administrator
Articles: 1
Online
Posts: 7449
Joined: Mon Jun 24, 2019 7:16 pm
4
Location: North Kent, UK
Status:
Online

TSS Awards Badges

TSS Photo of the Day

I Broke The Forum.

Re: Comet Pons-Brooks Visual Report - Wed eve 3/27/24

#2

Post by Graeme1858 »


Thanks for your report.

We have clear Western skies at sunset this Sunday. I will be looking for the comet with binoculars from the bedroom window.

NEOWISE was indeed a good one. I managed an image of it across the Thames estuary over Southend!

Graeme
______________________________________________
Celestron 9.25 f10 SCT, f6.3FR, CGX mount.
ASI1600MM Pro, ASI294MC Pro, ASI224MC
ZWO EFW, ZWO OAG, ASI220MM Mini.
APM 11x70 ED APO Binoculars.

https://www.averywayobservatory.co.uk/
Post Reply

Create an account or sign in to join the discussion

You need to be a member in order to post a reply

Create an account

Not a member? register to join our community
Members can start their own topics & subscribe to topics
It’s free and only takes a minute

Register

Sign in

Return to “Solar System”