Categories: Astronomy

Amazing Images of Comet F3 NEOWISE From Around the World

Comet F3 NEOWISE continues to dazzle in these spectacular images.

Cometary dawn. Image credit and copyright: Jonathan Truong.

Just. Wow. If you’re like us, your space-feed has been inundated with some pretty spectacular images of Comet C/2020 F3 NEOWISE as of late. F3 NEOWISE broke from the pack of good binocular comets for 2020 early this month, to become one of the best northern hemisphere comets in a generation.

The incredible twin-tailed sweep of Comet F3 NEOWISE. Image Credit and Copyright: Shadi Nassri.

Discovered by NASA’s Near Earth Object, Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer in late March 2020, F3 NEOWISE survived perihelion on July 3rd, passing just 0.29 Astronomical Units (AU) from the Sun and reaching a splendid +1st magnitude near its maximum.

And the best may be yet to come. The dawn apparition was a bashful one, hugging the horizon to the northeast about an hour prior to sunrise. I could juuuust make out the slice of the comet’s tail against the brightening dawn sky last Saturday morning: binoculars made the comet jump out in contrast, reminiscent of Comet C/2011 L4 PanSTARRS at dusk back in 2013.

Comet F3 NEOWISE, shinning through high clouds against a dawn sky. Credit and copyright: Ian Barredo.

Still, many photographers braved the early morning wake-up over the past week, with amazing results. Once a comet reaches brighter than +2nd magnitude, it becomes brilliant enough to catch it along with the terrestrial foreground.

Comet F3 NEOWISE over Black Mountain, North Carolina. Image credit and copyright: Bray Falls.

Many observers noted a bifurcated, ‘shadow nucleus’, as the comet sprouted a twin ion versus dust tail, reminiscent of Comet Hale-Bopp in the late 90s. It’s strange to think that the amazing doubleheader of Hale-Bopp and Hyakutake arrived right before the era of film gave way to digital astrophotography. We’re certainly seeing the results of this revolution in the amazing flurry of spectacular images of F3 NEOWISE that are now trickling in.

The sweep of the ion versus dust-tail of comet F3 NEOWISE. Image credit and coyright: Mustafa Aydin.

Now, the celestial stage is set for Act 2. Already, comet F3 NEOWISE is circumpolar (above the horizon all night) as seen from north of latitude 45 degrees. It’s now getting better to see at dusk low to the northwest as it slinks across the constellation of the Lynx and into the paws of the Great Bear Ursa Major, retracing the footsteps of the asterism known as the ‘Three Leaps of the Gazelle.’

The apparent celestial path of Comet F3 NEOWISE through the last half of July, looking to the NW from latitude 35 degrees north 45 minutes after sunset. Credit Starry Night.

The good news is, comet F3 NEOWISE is getting closer to the Earth, and will pass by on its 6,500 year outbound orbit at 0.692 AU distant on July 23rd. This will show us the comet in profile, and I’ll make a small bet that most of the general public will see it around this time… if it remains bright.

Comet F3 NEOWISE over Cannon Beach, Oregon. Image credit and copyright: Daniel Gomez.

Strange but fun fact: comets actually sweep their tails out ahead of the inner coma and nucleus past perihelion, with the ion tail blowing out through the solar wind away from the Sun and the dust tail sweeping forward along its orbit.

The sweeping tail of Comet F3 NEOWISE. Image credit and copyright: Johnathan Truong.

If you’ve got clear skies, find a dark site and look for the comet tonight. We can just pick it out now with binoculars… and that’s from downtown, light-polluted Norfolk. Mathew Browne has a photo-tutorial on PetaPixel on how to shoot the comet with your tripod-mounted DSLR and get amazing results.

Comet F3 NEOWISE from July 12th. Image credit and copyright: Sebastian Voltmer.

Clouded out? The good folks at the Virtual Telescope Project have got you covered, with a live webcast featuring Comet F3 NEOWISE on July 23rd, hosted by astronomer Gianluca Masi.

Comet F3 NEOWISE over Joshua Tree National Park. Image credit and copyright: Stan Moniz.

Right now, the comet seems to be holding steady at about magnitude +2. It’s also starting the swift climb out of the low horizon murk into the dark starry background this weekend, another plus. Will it remain bright? Will F3 NEOWISE continue to dazzle, or disintegrate? Unlike death and taxes, nothing is ever certain when it comes to comets, except their orbit. To quote Dr. Pamela Gay from a recent Astronomy Cast episode: “I’ll believe it’s a bright comet when it turns up in my eyepiece.”

Our own humble image of the nucleus of comet F3 NEOWISE, taken with a Unistellar eVScope. Credit: Dave Dickinson.

Enjoy these amazing images, and get out there and enjoy F3 NEOWISE, while it’s still bright.

Camping with the comet… Image credit and copyright: Kenneth LeRose.
Comet F3 NEOWISE plus a meteor over Pinnacle Peak in Price, Utah. Image credit and copyright: Tyson Chappell.
David Dickinson

David Dickinson is an Earth science teacher, freelance science writer, retired USAF veteran & backyard astronomer. He currently writes and ponders the universe as he travels the world with his wife.

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