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APOD: Comet ATLAS Breaks Up (2020 Apr 16)

Posted: Thu Apr 16, 2020 4:10 am
by APOD Robot
Image Comet ATLAS Breaks Up

Explanation: Cruising through the inner solar system, Comet ATLAS C2019/Y4 has apparently fragmented. Multiple separate condensations within its diffuse coma are visible in this telescopic close-up from April 12, composed of frames tracking the comet's motion against trailing background stars. Discovered at the end of December 2019, this comet ATLAS showed a remarkably rapid increase in brightness in late March. Northern hemisphere comet watchers held out hope that it would become a bright nake-eye comet as it came closer to Earth in late April and May. But fragmenting ATLAS is slowly fading in northern skies. The breakup of comets is not uncommon though. This comet ATLAS is in an orbit similar to the Great Comet of 1844 (C/1844 Y1) and both may be fragments of a single larger comet.

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Re: APOD: Comet ATLAS Breaks Up (2020 Apr 16)

Posted: Thu Apr 16, 2020 5:34 am
by Chris Peterson
APOD Robot wrote: Thu Apr 16, 2020 4:10 am Image Comet ATLAS Breaks Up

Explanation: Cruising through the inner solar system, Comet ATLAS C2019/Y4 has apparently fragmented. Multiple separate condensations within its diffuse coma are visible in this telescopic close-up from April 12, composed of frames tracking the comet's motion against trailing background stars. Discovered at the end of December 2019, this comet ATLAS showed a remarkably rapid increase in brightness in late March. Northern hemisphere comet watchers held out hope that it would become a bright nake-eye comet as it came closer to Earth in late April and May. But fragmenting ATLAS is slowly fading in northern skies. The breakup of comets is not uncommon though. This comet ATLAS is in an orbit similar to the Great Comet of 1844 (C/1844 Y1) and both may be fragments of a single larger comet.
Snowstorm moving in, and truly awful seeing tonight (3.5 arcsec) so I can't quite resolve the fragments, but it's pretty apparent even so that the comet has broken up. The comet is a little less bright than last week, but its tail is longer and brighter.
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C_2019-Y4-_ATLAS__120.000secs_-30.jpg

Re: APOD: Comet ATLAS Breaks Up (2020 Apr 16)

Posted: Thu Apr 16, 2020 10:53 am
by Indigo_Sunrise
Still a very nice image, Chris. Thank you for sharing!

Re: APOD: Comet ATLAS Breaks Up (2020 Apr 16)

Posted: Thu Apr 16, 2020 11:04 am
by GeoXXXXX
Damn depressing how these comets almost never seem to pan out... :evil:

Eric

Re: APOD: Comet ATLAS Breaks Up (2020 Apr 16)

Posted: Thu Apr 16, 2020 11:40 am
by orin stepanek
C2019Y4_20.04.13_1100px.jpg

Awe! Terrible death of a promising star! 😥 An old fart like me looks
forward to heavenly events of comets and new discoveries!

Re: APOD: Comet ATLAS Breaks Up (2020 Apr 16)

Posted: Thu Apr 16, 2020 11:59 am
by neufer
Click to play embedded YouTube video.
orin stepanek wrote: Thu Apr 16, 2020 11:40 am
Awe! Terrible death of a promising star! 😥

An old fart like me looks forward to heavenly
events of comets and new discoveries!

Re: APOD: Comet ATLAS Breaks Up (2020 Apr 16)

Posted: Thu Apr 16, 2020 1:32 pm
by TheZuke!
"She's breakin' up on us Captain!"
-Engineering Officer Montgomery Scott

SETI: Fragmentation of Comet ATLAS Observed by Citizen Astronomers

Posted: Sat Apr 18, 2020 3:40 pm
by bystander
Fragmentation of Comet ATLAS Observed on the First
Crowd-Sourced Pictures from Citizen Astronomers

SETI Institute | Unistellar eVscopes Network | 2020 Apr 16
A group of citizen astronomers scattered all over the world has just demonstrated how a network of digital Unistellar eVscopes can work together to deliver the first-of-its-kind crowd-generated images of Comet ATLAS while its disintegrating.

Discovered in December, Comet ATLAS was expected to become the brightest comet of 2020, visible to the naked eye. Several days ago, however, astronomers began to suspect that the comet had split into multiple pieces when it began dimming rapidly. At Unistellar, this created a unique opportunity to summon our community of citizen astronomers together to collect a high-quality image of this beautiful, but dying cosmic phenomenon.

On the night of Saturday, April 11, dozens of eVscope users in Belgium, Finland, France, Switzerland, Germany, the United Kingdom, and other countries gathered virtually to set up eVscopes in their backyards, on balconies, or out in the countryside. Their locations varied, but they all had one and only one goal in mind: capture photos of the dying comet. A similar call for observations was released on Tuesday, April 14 for the US after demise of the comet was announced to image variation in the coma of the comet. ...