© Andy Roberts 1997. Pictured comet is C/1995 O1 Hale-Bopp.

Comet 8P/Tuttle reaches peak brightness

Dominic Ford, Editor
From the Comets feed

Objects: 8P/Tuttle
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Comet 8P/Tuttle is forecast to reach the brightest point in its 2007 apparition on 23 December. At that time, it will lie at a distance of 1.07 AU from the Sun, and at a distance of 0.09 AU from the Earth.

From Fairfield on 23 December it will be visible between 18:05 and 04:55. It will become accessible at around 18:05, when it rises to an altitude of 15° above your eastern horizon. It will reach its highest point in the sky at 23:30, 62° above your southern horizon. It will become inaccessible at around 04:55 when it sinks below 15° above your western horizon.

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The events that comprise the 2007–2008 apparition of 8P/Tuttle are as follows:

Date Event
23 Dec 2007Comet 8P/Tuttle reaches peak brightness
23 Dec 2007Comet 8P/Tuttle passes perigee
13 Jan 2008Comet 8P/Tuttle passes perihelion

The table below lists the times when 8P/Tuttle will be visible from Fairfield day-by-day through its apparition:

Date Constellation Comet visibility
02 Dec 2007DracoVisible all night
Highest at 05:30, 56° above N horizon
04 Dec 2007DracoVisible all night
Highest at 05:10, 57° above N horizon
06 Dec 2007DracoVisible from 17:35 until 05:51
Highest at 04:46, 57° above N horizon
08 Dec 2007DracoVisible from 17:35 until 05:52
Highest at 04:19, 58° above N horizon
10 Dec 2007Ursa MajorVisible from 17:34 until 05:55
Highest at 03:49, 59° above N horizon
12 Dec 2007Ursa MajorVisible from 17:31 until 06:01
Highest at 03:15, 61° above N horizon
14 Dec 2007Ursa MajorVisible from 17:27 until 06:07
Highest at 02:38, 64° above N horizon
16 Dec 2007CamelopardalisVisible from 17:22 until 06:13
Highest at 02:00, 68° above N horizon
18 Dec 2007LynxVisible from 17:17 until 06:20
Highest at 01:20, 75° above N horizon
20 Dec 2007AurigaVisible from 17:12 until 06:28
Highest at 00:41, 87° above N horizon
22 Dec 2007GeminiVisible from 17:30 until 06:34
Highest at 00:05, 76° above S horizon
24 Dec 2007OrionVisible from 18:10 until 04:45
Highest at 23:27, 54° above S horizon
26 Dec 2007LepusVisible from 19:06 until 02:48
Highest at 22:57, 33° above S horizon
28 Dec 2007ColumbaVisible from 20:34 until 00:25
Highest at 22:30, 18° above S horizon
30 Dec 2007CaelumNot observable
01 Jan 2008PictorNot observable
03 Jan 2008DoradoNot observable
05 Jan 2008DoradoNot observable
07 Jan 2008ReticulumNot observable
09 Jan 2008ReticulumNot observable
11 Jan 2008ReticulumNot observable

A more detailed table of 8P/Tuttle's position on each night is available here. A diagram of the orbit of 8P/Tuttle is available here.

Finder chart

The chart below shows the path of 8P/Tuttle over the course of its apparition, as calculated from the orbital elements published by the Minor Planet Center (MPC). It is available for download, either on dark background, in PNG, PDF or SVG formats, or on a light background, in PNG, PDF or SVG formats. It was produced using StarCharter.

Comet brightnesses

Comets are intrinsically highly unpredictable objects, since their brightness depends on the scattering of sunlight from dust particles in the comet's coma and tail. This dust is continually streaming away from the comet's nucleus, and its density at any particular time is governed by the rate of sublimation of the ice in the comet's nucleus, as it is heated by the Sun's rays. It also depends on the amount of dust that is mixed in with that ice. This is very difficult to predict in advance, and can be highly variable even between successive apparitions of the same comet.

In consequence, while the future positions of comets are usually known with a high degree of confidence, their future brightnesses are not. For most comets, we do not publish any magnitude estimates at all. For the few comets where we do make estimates, we generally prefer the BAA's magnitude parameters to those published by the Minor Planet Center, since they are typically updated more often.

No estimate for the brightness of comet 8P/Tuttle is currently available.

The comet's position on 23 December 2007 will be:

Object Right Ascension Declination Constellation Magnitude
Comet 8P/Tuttle 05h46m40s 13°20'N Taurus 2.6

The coordinates are given in J2000.0.

The sky on 27 Apr 2024

The sky on 27 April 2024
Sunrise
05:53
Sunset
19:45
Twilight ends
21:30
Twilight begins
04:08

19-day old moon
Waning Gibbous

86%

19 days old

Planets
Rise Culm. Set
Mercury 05:10 11:29 17:48
Venus 05:36 12:12 18:48
Moon 22:59 03:24 07:45
Mars 04:25 10:21 16:16
Jupiter 06:43 13:51 20:59
Saturn 04:02 09:40 15:18
All times shown in EDT.

Source

This event was automatically generated on the basis of orbital elements published by the Minor Planet Center (MPC) , and is updated whenever new elements become available. It was last updated on 02 Jan 2024.

Image credit

© Andy Roberts 1997. Pictured comet is C/1995 O1 Hale-Bopp.

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Fairfield

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Longitude:
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41.14°N
73.26°W
EDT

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