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Our waning gibbous moon and Comet Machholz were at similar altitudes
when I stepped outside this evening -- my first clear evening in several nights. Nevertheless, Comet Machholz was definitely visible to the naked eye (by myself) from rural Montana. In 8x42 binoculars the comet was (still) a roughly disk-shaped fuzz-ball that was brighter toward the center. In hand held 20x80 binoculars the coma seemed to be elongated a little northeast of the comet's brightest region. Weather permitting, I'm looking forward to viewing this comet a few nights hence in the absence of moonlight. My wife and son had no difficulty seeing the comet with the smaller, hand held binoculars; but they were unsuccessful in spotting Comet Machholz with their naked eyes. A green laser proved useful in showing them precisely where to look. This comet reminds me of Comet IRAS-Araki-Alcock from quite a few years ago; but Machholz appears a bit smaller than my memory's impression of the nearby, fast moving IRAS-Araki-Alcock. Sketcher To sketch is to see. |
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