Celestial News: Here Comes Comet Hartley 2

There’s a comet coming!  Right now, Comet Hartley 2 is an unimpressive green blob in the constellation of Cassiopeia, but in the weeks ahead, it could blossom into the best little comet of 2010.  It might reach 5th magnitude in mid-to-late October, making it faintly visible to the unaided eye from dark sky locations.   And, as an extra bonus, a NASA spacecraft will buzz only 600 miles from Comet Hartley 2 on November 4, revealing small details on the heart of this icy interloper for the first time.

Comet Hartley 2 is now moving past the familiar "W" shaped constellation of Cassiopeia. Face the northeastern sky around 8:30 PM and use binoculars to sweep for the faint, green fuzzball. The inset at top right shows how the comet might appear through binoculars. Comet Hartley 2 could reach naked-eye brightness around October 20, when it is closest to Earth. Photo by Jimmy Westlake, 2010.

There are basically two kinds of comets, long period ones that come around every million years or so, like famous Comet Hale-Bopp in 1997, and short period comets that buzz past earth every few years or decades. Halley’s Comet is probably the most famous of these.  Comet Hartley 2 is of the short period kind.  Discovered in 1986 by Australian astronomer Malcolm Hartley, this little ice-ball gets tangled up with Jupiter every so often and Jupiter’s gravitational tug has shortened Comet Hartley 2’s orbital period around the Sun to only 6.47 years.

Comet Hartley 2 is small, even for a comet, and is not noted for putting on an impressive show, but this year’s pass is different, because it will skim only 11-million miles from Earth, its closest swing by Earth since its discovery.  Its rapid motion across the sky will be evident from night to night, especially near the time of closest approach to Earth on October 20, when the comet will be smack dab in the middle of the constellation Auriga.  Unfortunately, the nearly full moon will overwhelm the faint comet around that time.  You’ll do best to catch it the first two weeks of October and then again the first week or so of November, during the dark of the moon.

To spot the comet, go outside in the early evening around 8:30 and face the north-eastern sky.  There, you should spot the familiar “W” shaped pattern of Cassiopeia’s Chair, formed by five bright stars.  Comet Hartley 2 is making its way below the “W” night by night during the first week of October.  Although it might sprout a short tail as it gets closer to the Sun and Earth, for now the comet looks like a faint, fuzzy, green cloud, somewhat like a dandelion head.  On the evening of October 7, the little comet will skim right past the famous “Double Cluster” of stars between the constellations of Cassiopeia and Perseus.  Binoculars should show the beautiful star clusters and Comet Hartley 2 together in the same field of view.  You can bet I’ll have my telescope out snapping pictures that night!

If standing out in the chilly night air with binoculars looking for green fuzz balls isn’t your idea of fun, then you can sit back and relax until NASA’s Deep Impact spacecraft whizzes past Comet Hartley 2 on November 4th and beams back amazing close-up photos of its icy surface.  Only a handful of comets have been scrutinized at close range by spacecraft, so there is still much we can learn from this encounter.

For updates and current photos of Comet Hartley 2, keep an eye on the NASA-sponsored website www.Spaceweather.com.  ***

Professor Jimmy Westlake teaches astronomy and physics at Colorado Mountain College’s Alpine Campus. He is an avid astronomer whose photographs and articles have been published all around the world. His “Celestial News” column appears weekly in the Steamboat Today newspaper and his “Cosmic Moment” radio spots can be heard on local radio station KFMU.  Also, check out Jimmy’s astrophotography website at www.jwestlake.com.