The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Check the night skies soon for a dazzling view of comets, meteors

- By Robert Miller “Comets are like cats. They have tails and they do precisely what they want.’’ — Astronomer David Levy Contact Robert Miller at earthmatte­rsrgm @gmail.com

Another celestial tabby is about to promenade past us. With luck, it will purr and rub against our ankles, rather than turn tail with barely a nod our way.

Comet 46P/Wirtanen is about to get very close to Earth in December — only 7.2 million miles away. It will be the 10th closest comet pass in modern times.

If it brightens enough — as many astronomer­s expect it to do — people may be able to see it with their naked eyes, making it the brightest comet of the past few years.

“Let’s put it this way,” said Richard Talcott, senior editor of Astronomy Magazine. “As comets go, this should be a pretty good one.”

Which has put area astronomer­s on alert.

“We haven’t seen it yet,” said Monty Robson of the John. J. McCarthy Observator­y at New Milford High School. “But we’ll be looking for it. It’s within our range.”

And because Comet Wirtanen will be most visible high in the sky, near the Pleiades in the middle of December, it will coincide with the Geminid meteor shower — traditiona­lly one of the best of the year.

Which means, if the night skies are clear, there will be reasons for serious skywatchin­g parties.

Robson said the McCarthy Observator­y will almost certainly have a public event in mid-December.

New Pond Farm in Redding, in conjunctio­n with The Discovery Center in Ridgefield, already has a date set — Saturday, Dec. 15, at 6:30 p.m. To register, go to the Discovery Center’s website at ridgefield­discovery.org or New Pond’s at newpondfar­m.org

“All in all, it should be a pretty good night,” said Cliff Wattley, of Ridgefield, who leads the skywatch events at New Pond Farm.

Comets are either dirty snowballs or snowy dirtballs that orbit around our solar system. When those orbits take them close to the sun, some of their mass melts, with the debris flowing behind creating their tails.

When that debris hits the Earth’s atmosphere, we see it as a shooting star. There are billions, even trillions, of comets in the Oort Cloud and Kuiper Belt at the outer edge of the Solar System. Humans — who have been watching them for millennia, first in fear, then scientific­ally — have identified 5,253 of them.

Astronomer Carl Wirtanen first identified the comet named after him in 1948 at the Lick Observator­y in San Jose, Calif.

Unlike some of the faraway visitors, Comet 46P/ Wirtanen is part of the neighborho­od. Its orbit only takes it around Jupiter and back, circling the sun every 5.4 years. It’s also relatively small, with a diameter of about threequart­ers of a mile.

What makes it special this year is simply that its orbit is bringing it closer to Earth than it usually comes.

As it gets closer to the sun, it should brighten enough to see easily with binoculars or a telescope.

Brighten some more, and it becomes a nakedeye object — a fuzzy cotton ball of light amid the stars’ sharper points.

Talcott, of Astronomy Magazine, said what also makes Comet Wirtanen good for ordinary skywatcher­s is that it will be accessible. People can view it around 9:30 to 10 p.m., rather than at 3 a.m.

What astronomer­s don’t know is whether Wirtanen will show off or be a no-show.

“It’s anybody’s guess,” said Geoff Chester, spokesman for the U.S. Naval Observator­y in Washington, D.C.

“It could be spectacula­r,” Robson said.

 ?? Erik Viktor / Associated Press ?? An artist's rendition shows the Rosetta orbiter swooping over its lander after touchdown on the nucleus of Comet 46P/Wirtanen.
Erik Viktor / Associated Press An artist's rendition shows the Rosetta orbiter swooping over its lander after touchdown on the nucleus of Comet 46P/Wirtanen.

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