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Comet Machholz with the Hyades/Pleiades Shot
- Keith g
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- Super Giant
Just would like to share it with you all, hope you like it
Keith..
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- michaeloconnell
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Up to now, I've been using ISO800. However, it seems very sensitive to the faintest traces of light pollution. Would I be better off using ISO400 and increasing the exposure time??
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- Bill_H
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I'm not sure if it's my imagination or not, but it looks in that photograph very similar to what I saw through the scope last night, but do I see two very faint tails on the comet? One ponting downwards and one upish. Both tails look to me they are representing about ten minutes to 6 not sure if thats am or pm :lol: . But perhaps it's my imagination, but it did look like it through the scope as well.
Bill H.
Astronomers do it with the lights off.
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- James Butler
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Hi,
I'm not sure if it's my imagination or not, but it looks in that photograph very similar to what I saw through the scope last night, but do I see two very faint tails on the comet? One ponting downwards and one upish. Both tails look to me they are representing about ten minutes to 6 not sure if thats am or pm :lol: . But perhaps it's my imagination, but it did look like it through the scope as well.
Bill H.
From what I can tell from my photos and the others I have seen on this site is that there is no tail. At least not with the exposures we have been taking. From the direction of the comet's travel I would say those tail-like features are similar to the bow-wave on a ship. In this case it is created by material "boiling off" the front of the comet and being forced into a bow-wave through interaction with the solar wind. A tail would usually be in line with the direction of travel if made of heavy matter. Lighter matter would be forced directly away from the sun by the solar wind. The features we are seeing on Machholz are like neither of these cases as both features are at the same angle either side of the direction of travel.
The contour map I created from my raw image helps reinforce my view.
Any other ideas, readers?
James Butler
Astronomy Diary - astronomy-diary.blogspot.com/
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- mjs
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I reprocessed some images taken last night to try to see the tails. See the other thread for this subject.
Michael Scully
Michael Scully
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- Keith g
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Bill, James & Michael, I think there is a hint of 2 tails, you can see 2 tails at 10 and 6 o'clock positions, but other people observing and photographing are reporting the same thing, 2 tails but visually very short.
Keith
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