GREAT NEWS. PREDICTABLE IF YOU'D SEEN IT!!
Jerry Flaherty
- Original Message -
From: "Sterling K. Webb" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Meteorite List"
Sent: Saturday, January 13, 2007 9:31 PM
Subject: [meteorite-list] Comet McNaught Is Now A DAYLUGHT COMET!
> http://spaceweather.com/
>
>"Comet McNaught is now visible in broad
> daylight. 'It's fantastic,' reports Wayne Winch
> of Bishop, California. 'I put the sun behind a
> neighbor's house to block the glare and the
> comet popped right into view. You can even
> see the tail!'
>Just hours ago, Mark Vornhusen took this
> picture of the comet between clouds over
> Gais, Switzerland
>This weekend is a special time for Comet
> McNaught because it is passing close to the sun.
> Solar heat is causing the comet to vaporize
> furiously and brighten to daylight visibility. At
> magnitude -4 to -5, McNaught is the brightest
> comet since Ikeya-Seki in 1965.
>The secret to seeing McNaught: Get rid of the
> sun. You can do this by standing in the shadow
> of a tall building or billboard. Make a fist and hold it
> at arm's length. The comet is about one fist-width
> (5 degrees) east of the sun's position. Try it!
>Warning: Binoculars dramatically improve the
> view of the comet, allowing you to see structure
> within the tail . But please be super-careful not to
> look at the sun. Direct sunlight through binoculars
> can cause permanent eye damage."
>
>The comet is now as bright or brighter than
> Venus, which can usually be seen in the daylight
> if you know where to look. A good trick (often
> recommended for spotting Venus in daylight) is
> to take a small cardboard mailing tube one inch or
> more in diameter or the central tube out of a roll
> of paper towels and put it to one eye as if it were
> a telescope (closing the other eye, naturally).
>
>I would love to give you a first hand description,
> but I happen to be in the dead middle of a classic
> midwestern ice storm. Every leaf, branch, twig,
> and blade of grass is sheathed in a centimeter of
> ice, and the sky has been a dark grey wooly mass
> for two days of perpetual twilight. If the Sun went
> supernova, I wouldn't have been able to see it...
>
>Somewhere the Sun is shining, somewhere the
> comet's flying, but there is no joy in Mugville; the
> Visible Universe has struck out.
>
>
> Sterling K. Webb
>
>
>
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