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Comet 12P Pons Brooks on the 25th April. It was seen in binoculars (the comet requires a telescope or binoculars). The image was taken with a 150mm diameter F5 telescope. It should be a nice photographic object in a couple of days when the bright moon is out of the evening sky.

I posted a finder chart recently, for those with optical aid, to see or image it.
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Comet 12P Pons Brooks on the 25th April. It was seen in binoculars (the comet requires a telescope or binoculars). The image was taken with a 150mm diameter F5 telescope. It should be a nice photographic object in a couple of days when the bright moon is out of the evening sky.

I posted a finder chart recently, for those with optical aid, to see or image it.

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Great stuff Bathurst Observatory, i was clouded out tonight!

Kathleen Moore

Georgie

Pat Drury

Brooke Coolidge

From Molong wit Nikon 5600 -55-300 lens.

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With the Moon leaving the evening sky late April, early May, I thought I would provide a finder chart for those wanting to try and find comet 12P Pons Brooks in a darker sky. This chart plots the positions each night from the 29th of April (lowest yellow dot) to the 10th of May (highest yellow dot) looking west. These are for around 6:30 pm on each of those nights. The number at the end represents the predicted brightness. NOTE: YOU WILL REQUIRE A TELESCOPE OR GOOD BINOCULARS TO SEE THE COMET.

The constellation of Orion low in the west will make a good starting point to find the comet. Remember, the comet only very slowly changes position relative to the background stars night after night.
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With the Moon  leaving the evening sky late April, early May, I thought I would provide a finder chart for those wanting to try and find comet 12P Pons Brooks in a darker sky. This chart plots the positions each night from the 29th of April (lowest yellow dot) to the 10th of May (highest yellow dot) looking west. These are for around 6:30 pm on each of those nights. The number at the end represents the predicted brightness. NOTE: YOU WILL REQUIRE A TELESCOPE OR GOOD BINOCULARS TO SEE THE COMET.

The constellation of Orion low in the west will make a good starting point to find the comet. Remember, the comet only very slowly changes position relative to the background stars night after night.

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Can you please mark Jupiter on this map? Very helpful thanks. Will be looking

Thank you. That is helpful

thank you for this.., it gives me a chance..i do have binocs this time...

Michelle Hadley

Warren Robins

Mink Tuangporn Gough

Thank you 😃🌑🌟☄️

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Comet 12P Pons Brooks on the evening of the 22nd April. Still hard to view due to a near full moon and twilight. In the image you can 'just' make out an ion and dust tails. Remember this is an image taken with a telescope. You could not see the comet with just your eyes!

It was really sad hearing how wrong the media was reporting on this comet tonight. I heard reports such as "streaking across the sky, visible to the eye, and best night to see it" all totally incorrect!

I am looking forward to next week when it can be imaged against a dark sky!
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Comet 12P Pons Brooks on the evening of the 22nd April. Still hard to view due to a near full moon and twilight. In the image you can just make out an ion and dust tails. Remember this is an image taken with a telescope. You could not see the comet with just your eyes!

It was really sad hearing how wrong the media was reporting on this comet tonight. I heard reports such as streaking across the sky, visible to the eye, and best night to see it all totally incorrect!

I am looking forward to next week when it can be imaged against a dark sky!Image attachment

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Thank you, I took my son out tonight and couldn’t make anything out. We thought we had missed the opportunity but will try again next week.

Helen Crosland tried last night and tonight but just can’t see it. I’ll try next week too I think

Oh that’s good to hear they got it wrong. We all still have a chance to see it. Do we look to the west?

My dad saw it with his eyes and took photos of it at 5.25 on the north coast

Couldn't see with naked eye but spotted it with binoculars not real clear. Glad you do excellent job thank you.

I heard the news tonight say "lighting up the night sky".. bloody media 🤔

Yep. Us along with 4 other couples had perfect views of the horizon from Dural (NSW) and could see where it was supposed to be…. Even with binoculars, none of us could spot it. Such a shame!!! Great to meet other amateur enthusiasts though.

Comets do not 'streak across the sky', they get confused with meteors.

‘Lit up the sky’ was another phrase used. Which all makes for disappointment.

Rach Hart Carole Hart looks like next week might be the better viewing

love ya work

The media can beat anything up with there hype

Alexis

Jennifer Cummings

Kai Naylor

Liz Domingue

Andrew Gardner

Ben Gaudron

Cheree Andrews

Viv Collings

Timmy!!!

Lara Fullgrabe

Taylor Carpenter Shane Carpenter

Christine Parish

Thanks for that.

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A couple of images of 12P Pons Brooks on the 21st April. It was just visible in binoculars despite bright moonlight and twilight interference. These images were taken with a small 150mm diameter F5 telescope at 18:50-19:10. ... See MoreSee Less

A couple of images of 12P Pons Brooks on the 21st April. It was just visible in binoculars despite bright moonlight and twilight interference. These images were taken with a small 150mm diameter F5 telescope at 18:50-19:10.Image attachment

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We saw it tonight from Mungo NP, after sunset in the low western sky, as the moon was rising in the east. Magical night

Well done 👍 I had trouble finding it for all the smoke in the west of Cudal.

Excellent work!

We were looking from Mt.Pan but no luck identifying it. 🙁

Brittani Rose I want to go find this green comet

Rach Hart

John Batchelor

Liz Barnes

Susi Crawford

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So what are the REAL prospects for comet 12/P Pons Brooks? Not great really. The comet reaches closest to the sun 22nd April when it is still not very favourable for southern hemisphere. Some observers with telescopes or binoculars, are just able to see at now (mid April) just above and left of Jupiter, but are also reporting it as difficult to see (I found it hard to image). There is media hype around the 22nd April (perihelion date) as the best to see it, but this is just media confusion re closest to the sun date and besides the full moon will also make it hard to see.

It is moving higher in twilight and further due west as we enter late April (after full moon) and through May, but due to Earth/comet geometry, it will be fading from about mag 5.5 to magnitude 6.5 (or fainter) during this time. So definitely not a comet you can see with just your eyes!! You will need binoculars or better yet a telescope to observe it. DSLR cameras should also pick it up with say 10-20s exposures and a 50-100mm lens.

It will be too low for the large observatory telescope in the west during early May, but I'm hoping for images late May into June. I think though it may be a nice photographic object at this time and likely will set up a different telescope for this purpose myself (In fact I posted an image on the 18th). It will continue to fade through June from mag 7.1 early June to 8.4 by the time the moon no longer interferes towards the end of the month. However, being higher in the western sky during late June, should still be a nice photographic object, particularly in wide field telescopes.

The finder charts are for the 10th of May at 6:30pm and 27th of May at 6:30pm, both dates when the moon is not present and during its "best" viewing dates.
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So what are the REAL prospects for comet 12/P Pons Brooks? Not great really. The comet reaches closest to the sun 22nd April when it is still not very favourable for southern hemisphere. Some observers with telescopes or binoculars, are just able to see at now (mid April) just above and left of Jupiter, but are also reporting it as difficult to see (I found it hard to image). There is media hype around the 22nd April (perihelion date) as the best to see it, but this is just media confusion re closest to the sun date and besides the full moon will also make it hard to see. 

It is moving higher in twilight and further due west as we enter late April (after full moon) and through May, but due to Earth/comet geometry, it will be fading from about mag 5.5 to magnitude 6.5 (or fainter) during this time. So definitely not a comet you can see with just your eyes!! You will need binoculars or better yet a telescope to observe it. DSLR cameras should also pick it up with say 10-20s exposures and a 50-100mm lens.

It will be too low for the large observatory telescope in the west during early May, but Im hoping for images late May into June. I think though it may be a nice photographic object at this time and likely will set up a different telescope for this purpose myself (In fact I posted an image on the 18th). It will continue to fade through June from mag 7.1 early June to 8.4 by the time the moon no longer interferes towards the end of the month. However, being higher in the western sky during late June, should still be a nice photographic object, particularly in wide field telescopes.

The finder charts are for the 10th of May at 6:30pm and 27th of May at 6:30pm, both dates when the moon is not present and during its best viewing dates.Image attachment

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You can try now but you need a good unobstructed horizon in twilight. Best in a dark sky from 27th onwards.

That's a good summary Ray...thanks

Good luck, hopefully you will get some good photos. Here at Cudal I have got 3 photos (out of town) - 12th, 14th and 16th so far but adding to all of the other things making it hard to photograph, we have smoke from burning off and all the reduction burns going on at the moment 😷😷😷😷😩 The media haven't a clue 😵‍💫 Some saying you can see it just before Sunrise 🙄 My research (Stellarium) is saying around 4th May for us in Cudal, the Moon won't be up and 12p still at Mag 4.71 , hopefully the weather will be good with no smoke !!!!! 🤞 The 27th April isn't too bad either but the Moon rises at 7.30pm that night at 88% .

so have a crack at it between 10th and 20th may? I have a 500mm lens

In a real imaging challenge, I was just able to capture comet Pons Brooks in evening twilight on the 18th of April. It couldn't actually see it even with the portable telescope I was using, but was able to record it in an image in a ten second exposure. ... See MoreSee Less

In a real imaging challenge, I was just able to capture comet Pons Brooks in evening twilight on the 18th of April. It couldnt actually see it even with the portable telescope I was using, but was able to record it in an image in a ten second exposure.

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Very well done Ray. I hope the prospects are better for May.

Excellent

Wendy Mied!!

Photoshopped

16th April, and I snapped some Moon images just before the public tour! ... See MoreSee Less

16th April, and I snapped some Moon images just before the public tour!Image attachment

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Grace Fagnano

Orion is getting low in the west this time of year. This is Orion taken with just a camera with a 35mm lens. You can see a few nebula and star clusters!

Tours for school holidays are the 15th until the 18th, sorry there aren't more available, but I have a few things on myself. There is also a tour on the 4th of May.

There is a bit of interest in comet Pons Brooks as well. It "may" be just visible late in April for us in Southern Hemisphere, but it will be low in the west in some twilight at this time. I will detail more in a couple of weeks.
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Orion is getting low in the west this time of year. This is Orion taken with just a camera with a 35mm lens. You can see a few nebula and star clusters!

Tours for school holidays are the 15th until the 18th, sorry there arent more available, but I have a few things on myself. There is also a tour on the 4th of May. 

There is a bit of interest in comet Pons Brooks as well. It may be just visible late in April for us in Southern Hemisphere, but it will be low in the west in some twilight at this time. I will detail more in a couple of weeks.

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Hello there! My friend and I are thinking of making a trip to bathrust between 16-18th april. We were wondering if we can come along for the stargazing tour! If so, what are the procedures we need to take on for bookings?

Do you think you'll be able to get n image of the Devil Comet soon?

Robert Henry Hansen

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