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A comet‘s tale... How much of the world came to miss the greatest comet in decades (and what communicating astronomy with the public may have had to do with it) Daniel Fischer FG Kometen der VdS Germany CAP 2007 Athens
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Early August 2006 An inconspicious beginning... ● A most promising orbit for January 2007... ●... but close to the Sun all the time... ●... and predicting comet brightnesses is an art
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The first days of January 2007: early hopes and worries (on specialist sites) January 1: author says -6... m
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January 7Astronomy buffs in mass media take notice
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January 9
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January 9: the first press release (from ‚someone‘) I‘ve seen!
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Visual impression equal to typical digital photograph!
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January 10
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January 11
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January 12 Phase 2: daytime views! End of phase 1: North, bright, small in size, low
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January 13
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A risky conundrum: exceedingly rare event, but only with very clear skies and possibly dangerous! -> hardly mentioned at all
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January 14: perihelion! -5.5 mag.! Daylight naked eye in places! January 15: Southern window about to open – now what...?
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January 18: ½ week of greatest glory! Only at dusk – extremely wide tail – as coma sets, tail visibility improves – clear skies essential – Moon soon
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January 19 The Great Southern Observatories awake... with wide-angle ‚amateur‘ pictures!
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The best days – if weather cooperates...
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Italy! Yet another surprise: end of tail rises again for mid-Northern latitudes! Chile
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January 20 „Using“ the comet for a different purpose...
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20 January 21: Moon returns, best window closes after some 5 days – so how was your weather? 21
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January 28: Southern (Moon-free) morning window
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January 31: surface brightness way down already February 1: one of very few summary reports
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A rant against comet- ingnorant media on German McN blog The brightest comet since 1965 – the first Great Comet of the ‚modern media‘ era – why then the silence?
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Reasons for the problematic coverage of the McNaught phenomenon in the general media: few clearcut data on nuclear behaviour for many months general fear of ‚failing‘ comet among influentials difficult viewing conditions for lay persons in Northern pre-perihelion window anyway (or so they thought) But... one could have reported much more widely around Jan 5: brightness increasing dramatically day after day, soon exceeding even bright planets around Jan 9: numerous ‚discoveries‘ in high North around Jan 12: daytime visibility (question of risk) around Jan 15: it got three times brighter than Venus Jan 17 to 21: breathtaking tail for Southern hemisphere Apart from improving comet forecasting (how?) there should be ‚someone in charge‘ to tell the media about unusual visible sky events, repeatedly
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A comet for the IYA?! C/2007 N3 (Lulin) – February 17 til 28, 2009 Brightness about +5.0 mag. -> faint naked eye, easy binocular, nice small telescope view In opposition to the Sun (elongation 170-180°) No Moon in the sky – visible in 1st half of night Elevation 35... 45° for Central Europe 70... 80° for Mexico 40... 50° for Australia A comet for the whole planet to enjoy!
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