Sat, Dec 21, 7:08 AM CST

Comet Lovejoy

Bryce Space posted on Oct 02, 2016
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Description


Comet Lovejoy C/2014 Q2 (Lovejoy) is a long-period comet discovered on 17 August 2014 by Terry Lovejoy using a 0.2-meter (8 in) Schmidt–Cassegrain telescope. It was discovered at apparent magnitude 15 in the southern constellation of Puppis. It is the fifth comet discovered by Terry Lovejoy. Its blue-green glow is the result of organic molecules and water released by the comet fluorescing under the harsh UV and optical light of the sun as it passes through space. By December 2014, the comet had brightened to roughly magnitude 7.4, making it a small telescope and binoculars target. By mid-December, the comet was visible to the naked eye for experienced observers with dark skies and keen eyesight. On 28−29 December 2014, the comet passed 1/3° from globular cluster Messier 79. In January 2015, it brightened to roughly magnitude 4, and became one of the brightest comets located high in a dark sky since comet C/1995 O1 (Hale-Bopp) in 1997. On 7 January 2015, the comet passed 0.469 AU (70,200,000 km; 43,600,000 mi) from Earth. It crossed the celestial equator on 9 January 2015 becoming better seen from the Northern Hemisphere. The comet came to perihelion (closest approach to the Sun) on 30 January 2015 at a distance of 1.29 AU (193,000,000 km; 120,000,000 mi) from the Sun. At perihelion, its water production rate exceeded 20 metric tons per second. C/2014 Q2 originated from the Oort cloud, but is not a dynamically new comet. Before entering the planetary region (epoch 1950), C/2014 Q2 had an orbital period of about 11000 years with aphelion about 995 AU (1.49×1011 km; 9.25×1010 mi) from the Sun. After leaving the planetary region (epoch 2050), it will have an orbital period of about 8000 years with aphelion of about 800 AU. The comet was observed to release 21 different organic molecules in gas, including ethanol and glycolaldehyde, a simple sugar. The presence of organic molecules suggests that they are preserved materials synthesized in the outskirts of the solar nebula or at earlier stages of the Solar System formation.

Comments (13)


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jmb007

7:38AM | Sun, 02 October 2016

interessant

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Richardphotos

8:22AM | Sun, 02 October 2016

very well done spatial holiday

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Faemike55

9:44AM | Sun, 02 October 2016

great image and cool information

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Jean_C

10:44AM | Sun, 02 October 2016

Nice image and interesting infos!

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eekdog

11:37AM | Sun, 02 October 2016

Cool neon green lighting.

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jendellas

12:56PM | Sun, 02 October 2016

Good work & info. x

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GrandmaT

3:31PM | Sun, 02 October 2016

Outstanding image! Thank you for the information.

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Gendragon3D

4:13PM | Sun, 02 October 2016

Wow! Fantastic work!

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DukeNukem2005

4:14PM | Sun, 02 October 2016

Very good!

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BryceHoro

4:07AM | Mon, 03 October 2016

Very well done comet depiction.

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sandra46

10:34AM | Mon, 03 October 2016

very nice

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RodS

9:26PM | Mon, 03 October 2016

A lovely render and fascinating info on this comet. Well done, Real!

)

flavia49

6:46PM | Fri, 07 October 2016

beautiful


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