BajaNomad

ISON !!

captkw - 11-28-2013 at 10:17 AM

Today is the Day !!:?:

Ya Gotta be Kidding !!~

captkw - 11-28-2013 at 11:20 AM

Am I the only one here that's watching the biggest space thing of my lifetime....around 1:00 EST time is the magic number !!!

astrobaja - 11-28-2013 at 11:21 AM

Chances are quite high that it may totally disintegrate due to its super close pass to the sun. Its due to be at perihelion around 11 PST. Tomorrow the NASA data will tell us if it survived.

http://cometison.gsfc.nasa.gov/index/kiosk/dataset/one_0171

If it does survive then we may be a good show of it just after sunset probably starting around the 1st of Dec.

fingers crossed...

Its Today

captkw - 11-28-2013 at 11:37 AM

11/28/13 says the nasa website I just left...1:44 EST...Cool !! I just hope nasa and the cameras don't get overloaded like Other Gov sights !!!..But IT IS TODAY !!

Ateo - 11-28-2013 at 11:37 AM

I've been a fan and have been waiting for NASA to tell me to look up!

Hope it survives. Really, really hope it survives.

Other web sites

captkw - 11-28-2013 at 11:44 AM

Im stupid when comes to uploading a link !! But If you bounce around the web your find some really CooL live time stuff !! they also sent a few sat's just for this !!! Hope she makes it back around and sling shots past us without any problems here on this spinnin rock !!

astrobaja - 11-28-2013 at 11:45 AM

the NASA link I gave seems to be overloaded with requests so try this one:

(I made a shorter link with tinyurl cause it was stupid long!!

http://tinyurl.com/l3lv323

DavidE - 11-28-2013 at 11:50 AM

Hope it doesn't survive all the way to my back yard.

astrobaja - 11-28-2013 at 11:51 AM

Heres the best image taken of ISON so far by amateur Damian Peach from last week:

http://www.damianpeach.com/deepsky/c2012_s1_2013_11_15dp.jpg

David E

captkw - 11-28-2013 at 12:19 PM

If This baby comes back to your yard (possible) all of Baja will be gone !! this isn't a lttle rock size comet !!!! the smallest estimate I saw is 3 miles wide and some put it a hell of a lot bigger...Yikes !!makes me kinda think of wiley the coyote !!LOL just ckd the san fran cron and nothing on it..so I think they are trying to keep on the quiet side ...when I was a kid I saw all kinds of BIG holes in the ground in mexico and was amazing as a kid..and don't forget what happened in Serbia...Knarly!!

astrobaja - 11-28-2013 at 12:38 PM

Cap: it is not even remotely possible that remnants of ISON will hit Earth. Its actually solid core (not the coma which is the bright portion we see) is only 2km across (not miles) --compared to Hale Bop which had a core of 30km diameter!!

BTW latest data seems to indicate that its disintegrated.... but it was traveling,
360km/second, thats 1500 X's faster than a jet and faster than any man made probe ever made!!

http://www.slate.com/blogs/bad_astronomy/2013/11/21/comet_is...

astrobaja - 11-28-2013 at 01:03 PM

I think it would be best to re-name ISON comet Icarus!!

Actual IMage Of Ison Before It Got To The Sun

DavidE - 11-28-2013 at 01:05 PM


DavidE - 11-28-2013 at 02:53 PM

1. Timing: ISON will be brightest in the hour before the sun comes up. You can calculate sunrise time for your area here.

2. Clear skies: ISON will not be visible if there is too much cloud cover. Clear Sky Chart is a 48-hour astronomer’s forecast that can predict whether the sky will be clear and dark at a certain location.

3. Dark skies: City lights can obstruct viewing of ISON, and it will appear brightest in the sky away from city lights. Dark Sky Finder shows light pollution in and around North American cities.

4. Where to look: Look east toward where the sun will rise. Comet Watch is a free app that points users in the direction of ISON, updated by the minute. “The easiest way to find it is to look for Mars, and then draw a line down to the east — right where you think the sun is going to rise,” said NASA’s Comet ISON Observing Campaign (CIOC) coordinator Carey Lisse to the LA Times.

SEE RELATED: Comet ISON: Will it be “the Comet of the Century?”

5. Perihelion: Comet ISON 2013 has a live countdown to perihelion, set to happen on November 28 at 18:37:45 (1:37 pm EST).

According to Universetoday.com, on the morning of November 28, ISON will be about 2.5 degrees from the edge of the sun, which will decrease to .5 degrees by perihelion around midday in the U.S. ISON will be difficult to see at perihelion because it will be very close to the sun and viewers risk eye damage.

6. Risk of eye damage from the sun on perihelion: U.S. observers risk eye damage if they stare into the sun at midday on Thanksgiving to catch a glimpse at ISON. Instead there are several websites that will broadcast the event live.

7. Latest news and data on ISON: CIOC has regularly updated data and news on ISON their website. Comet ISON 2013 also has a live feed of ISON’s speed, distance from the sun, distance from the Earth, and estimated magnitude.

8. No time like the present: As several observers have stated, while ISON may be currently visible during the hour before dawn, its core could break up at any time, so if you want to see it, do it now.

9. Patience: It takes your eyes about 20 minutes to adapt to the darkness, so give yourself plenty of time before dawn to get outside and get comfortable. If you don’t see ISON where you should, give it a few minutes, look at other parts of the sky and try again.

10. Luck: Several news outlets have speculated that ISON may be breaking up and won’t survive its trip around the sun, as observers Tuesday reported ISON is getting less bright. However, other observers, including some at NASA’s STEREO spacecraft state that there is evidence that ISON’s core is still intact.



Read more: http://communities.washingtontimes.com/neighborhood/world-ou...
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astrobaja - 11-28-2013 at 04:47 PM

DavidE: number 10) LUCK: we're out of it, ISON is now ISOFF it has disintegrated....

[Edited on 11-29-2013 by astrobaja]

Ateo - 11-28-2013 at 05:37 PM

Bummer.

astrobaja - 11-28-2013 at 06:06 PM

well now 6 hours after perihelion, something has emerged from the other side of the sun, maybe some piece of it has survived after all, only time will tell.

Comets have a way of confounding even the best of "experts" After all we are only semi evolved simians!!

mtgoat666 - 11-28-2013 at 06:31 PM

Quote:
Originally posted by astrobaja
DavidE: number 10) LUCK: we're out of it, ISON is now ISOFF it has disintegrated....

[Edited on 11-29-2013 by astrobaja]


I so want to see a good comet this month that I am adopting the climate-change-deniers approach to life: always assume nasa or any govt employee, especially the scientist, is lying. Commie scientists say the comet dissolved? I say it exists, and exists even bigger!

vandenberg - 11-28-2013 at 06:34 PM

Ahhh goat, the devil makes you say this.:saint::saint:

Taco de Baja - 11-29-2013 at 10:23 AM

NASA thinks it may have made it...:D Time lapse video:

http://www.nasa.gov/content/goddard/comet-ison-may-have-survived/#.UpjK9dOIYuo

this has happened before but the comet broke up 3 day later. Let's hope that's not the case this time.

OFF AGAIN ON AGAIN

DavidE - 11-29-2013 at 12:53 PM


The undead comet...

Whale-ista - 11-29-2013 at 02:20 PM

ISON's still going!

http://www.slate.com/blogs/bad_astronomy/2013/11/29/ison_aft...

heading back !! (towards us)

captkw - 12-12-2013 at 10:21 PM

Ison is HUGE !! 250 000KM COMA and after rounding the sun has slowed down a bit,,but,, still very much in the big picture !!! FACT !! I heard so many folks that think that it just is gone...Not so my friend...Stay informed,,and happy Holidays !!....K&T:cool:

[Edited on 12-13-2013 by captkw]

Sweetwater - 12-12-2013 at 10:48 PM

Not sure if you have more of whatever, I'll have some....but the comet is pronounced dead......


Quote:

WASHINGTON – Comet ISON, once optimistically called the comet of the century, is dead, the victim of a way-too-close brush with the sun. It was barely a year old. The comet, which excited astronomers and the media as it zipped within 730,000 miles of the sun on Thanksgiving Day, was pronounced dead at a scientific conference Tuesday. Astronomers who had followed the ice ball mourned the loss of the sky show that once promised to light up during December. 'Sorry, everyone, Comet ISON is dead. But its memory will live on.' - Naval Research Lab astronomer Karl Battams Naval Research Lab astronomer Karl Battams, who headed the observing campaign for the comet, said ISON (EYE'-sahn) was stretched and pulled by the sun's powerful gravity. It was also hit with solar radiation. And the icy snowball just fell apart. "At this point it seems like there is nothing left," Battams said at the American Geophysical Union conference in San Francisco. "Sorry, everyone, Comet ISON is dead. But its memory will live on." Astronomers had hoped it would survive because some — but not most — comets make it past close approaches with the sun. Last year, Comet Lovejoy did. Had ISON survived it would have provided good naked-eye viewing in early December for the Northern Hemisphere, astronomers said. NASA had aimed several telescopes and spacecraft at the comet to watch its close brush with the sun, only to find it missing after the encounter. Comets are balls of dust and ice from the formation of the solar system billions of years ago. ISON was on its first trip after leaving the Oort cloud on the distant fringes of the solar system. Unlike comets that are "hardened" by several trips around the sun, ISON just couldn't survive its maiden voyage, Battams said. ISON, about half a mile wide, was tiny and probably smaller than originally estimated, Battams said. As the comet neared its closest approach to the sun, astronomers had a sense of loss. Battams called watching it in those final hours "a process of heartbreak."

Sweet water and all

captkw - 12-12-2013 at 10:51 PM

OK..belive what Ya want..But its not dead !! simply fact !!and the "dust" field is like 20 mil miles wide !!!