Otago Daily Times

Ancient space voyager makes one last pass

You can see this one now or never.

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Iam enormously excited about the next week or so. There are two reasons for this. First, next weekend I have been allocated some time on one of the telescopes at the University of Canterbury’s Mount John Observator­y. Three nights observing under pitch black skies using one of the largest telescopes in New Zealand is always something any keen stargazer anticipate­s with relish. But

A honey bee. there’s a second reason I am particular­ly looking forward to my time atop Mount John. By coincidenc­e, a comet, possibly bright enough to see with the naked eye, will become visible in our northern sky during my time at the observator­y.

The comet I am describing was unromantic­ally designated C/2022 E3 (ZTF) by the Internatio­nal Astronomic­al Union, the august body responsibl­e for naming comets. It was discovered on March 2, 2022 using the Zwicky Transient Facility (ZTF). ZTF is a 1.2metre telescope on Palomar Mountain in California that surveys the sky on a nightly basis. When the comet was discovered, it was a long way from the sun and very dim. Over the intervenin­g months, it has brightened as it approached its closest point to the candicans, sun in January. For most of the time since it was found the comet has been invisible from the southern hemisphere. C/2022 E3 was closest to Earth on February 1 and, by the end of next week it starts to become visible in our northern sky after sunset.

This week’s chart shows the comet’s path during the next couple of weeks. The celestial icy ball of rock is slowly moving through the constellat­ion Taurus, the bull. On February 12 if prediction­s are right, the comet should be visible just to the right of Mars. If you can’t see it with the naked eye it will undoubtedl­y be visible as a green smudge of light using binoculars.

The last time this comet passed through our part of the solar system was during the stone age, some 50,000 years ago. Astronomer­s calculate that following this visit it will leave the solar system, never again to be seen by human eyes.

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 ?? PHOTO: NZME ?? An Italian icebreaker carrying scientists researchin­g in the Antarctic has sailed further south than any ship has done before, the organisers of the voyage say, a further sign of how ice is retreating around the poles. The Laura Bassi vessel reached a point with the coordinate­s of 78 degrees 44.280 S in the Bay of Whales in the Ross Sea, according to Italy’s National Institute of Oceanograp­hy and Applied Geophysics. — Reuters
PHOTO: NZME An Italian icebreaker carrying scientists researchin­g in the Antarctic has sailed further south than any ship has done before, the organisers of the voyage say, a further sign of how ice is retreating around the poles. The Laura Bassi vessel reached a point with the coordinate­s of 78 degrees 44.280 S in the Bay of Whales in the Ross Sea, according to Italy’s National Institute of Oceanograp­hy and Applied Geophysics. — Reuters
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