Comet Swan's Omen
     13 October 2006
     >> About this Image
 
 
Saturn's Pearls

  12 October 2006
 
August 2008
  > Click to View Image Archive
July 2008
  > Click to View Image Archive
June 2008
  > Click to View Image Archive
May 2008
  > Click to View Image Archive
April 2008
  > Click to View Image Archive
March 2008
  > Click to View Image Archive
February 2008
  > Click to View Image Archive
January 2008
  > Click to View Image Archive
December 2007
  > Click to View Image Archive
November 2007
  > Click to View Image Archive
October 2007
  > Click to View Image Archive
September 2007
  > Click to View Image Archive
August 2007
  > Click to View Image Archive
July 2007
  > Click to View Image Archive
June 2007
  > Click to View Image Archive
May 2007
  > Click to View Image Archive
April 2007
  > Click to View Image Archive
March 2007
  > Click to View Image Archive
February 2007
  > Click to View Image Archive
January 2007
  > Click to View Image Archive
December 2006
  > Click to View Image Archive
November 2006
  > Click to View Image Archive
October 2006
  > Click to View Image Archive
September 2006
  > Click to View Image Archive
August 2006
  > Click to View Image Archive
July 2006
  > Click to View Image Archive
June 2006
  > Click to View Image Archive
May 2006
  > Click to View Image Archive
April 2006
  > Click to View Image Archive
March 2006
  > Click to View Image Archive
February 2006
  > Click to View Image Archive
January 2006
  > Click to View Image Archive
December 2005
  > Click to View Image Archive
November 2005
  > Click to View Image Archive
October 2005
  > Click to View Image Archive
September 2005
  > Click to View Image Archive
August 2005
  > Click to View Image Archive
July 2005
  > Click to View Image Archive
June 2005
  > Click to View Image Archive
May 2005
  > Click to View Image Archive
April 2005
  > Click to View Image Archive
March 2005
  > Click to View Image Archive
February 2005
  > Click to View Image Archive
January 2005
  > Click to View Image Archive
December 2004
  > Click to View Image Archive
November 2004
  > Click to View Image Archive
October 2004
  > Click to View Image Archive
September 2004
  > Click to View Image Archive
August 2004
  > Click to View Image Archive
July 2004
  > Click to View Image Archive
June 2004
  > Click to View Image Archive
May 2004
  > Click to View Image Archive
April 2004
  > Click to View Image Archive
March 2004
  > Click to View Image Archive
February 2004
  > Click to View Image Archive
January 2004
  > Click to View Image Archive
December 2003
  > Click to View Image Archive
November 2003
  > Click to View Image Archive
October 2003
  > Click to View Image Archive
September 2003
  > Click to View Image Archive
August 2003
  > Click to View Image Archive
July 2003
  > Click to View Image Archive
June 2003
  > Click to View Image Archive
May 2003
  > Click to View Image Archive
April 2003
  > Click to View Image Archive
 
Comet Swan's Omen 

Fitting for a Friday the 13th is this image of Comet Swan by skywatcher Tony Cook.

Comets were once heralded as omens of impending peril, though if you’re looking out for Comet Swan you’ll need to bring your own luck and – of course – telescope.

The comet is not visible to the unaided eye, but can be found by following the curve of the Big Dipper constellation’s handle.

Cook, who lives just outside of Leeds in the U.K., awoke at 3:00 a.m. British Summer Time on Sept. 30 for some early-morning observations of Swan using an eight-inch Dobsonian telescope and a Televue 85 camera.

“I found it very easily in binoculars, low on the northeast horizon,” Cook wrote in his log. “It’s bright as most comets go.”

Then Cook turned his telescope on the icy sky wanderer.

“Wow! It was bright enough to see that the coma was pale green,” Cook recalled. “Well worth getting up for.”

The result is this four-minute exposure of Comet Swan taken by Cook.

Also known as C/2006 M4, Comet Swan’s orbit can be seen here via NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory’s Small-Body Database Browser. The comet can be found in the northwest after sunset.

-- Tariq Malik

Credit: Tony Cook.

Return each weekday for a new SPACE.com Image of the Day.

© Imaginova Corp. All rights reserved.