Great report, Wayne, thanks. (I assume you mean comet Swan?) I was planning on taking a peek after Kurt's posting as well, until my mom called with a deceased water heater. I spent the evening shopping for, and installing her new one. Finished at 10:30 and after my 3 mile run and a cold supper, showered and collapsed into bed for 4 hours of sleep. Of course tonight the weather isn't cooperating. :o( Did you do any brightness estimates by comparing it with stars of known magnitude? The trick is to rack the star out-of-focus until it subtends about the same diameter in the eyepiece(s) as the comet. Makes brightness comparisons a lot easier. --- Wayne Sumner <wsumner@dsdmail.net> wrote:
I had a wonderful view of Comet Dawn last evening around 7:30. It was big and bright in the 25x100 binoculars I bought from Patrick a few weeks ago. The binoculars made it easy to sweep up the comet even just knowing the general location of the comet above Corona Borealis and right of Hercules. There was no sign of a tail in my light polluted skies, but the small, bright nucleus was surrounded by a large coma. A great view. Thanks for the heads up. Wayne Sumner
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