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View Full Version here: : Comet 2012 F6 Lemon- A Spectroscopic Perspective


Terry B
11-02-2013, 09:04 PM
Dear All
I aimed my LISA spectrograph at this now very popular comet to see what it looked like.
Comets are illuminate mostly by reflected sunlight but the composition of the comet changes the spectra so you can detemine some common elements in the comet.
Most of the comet spectra comes from carbon compounds that have been vapourised from the surface of the comet. Many of these are known as Swan bands. There is also CN and CH compounds.

Another interesting effect is the width of the actual spectra. My spectra was taken by aligning the coma of the comet on the slit of the spectrograph. For a star this would create a spectra a few pixels high but because the comet has a diffuse coma then the spectra is broad with the spectra from the diffuse coma visible above and below the comet body spectra as a weakening band vertically. See the attached image.
Cheers

Terry

pvelez
11-02-2013, 09:09 PM
Great stuff Terry

Pete

sheeny
11-02-2013, 09:18 PM
Good stuff, Terry.

Al.

Outbackmanyep
13-02-2013, 11:12 PM
Nice work Terry!

DavidTrap
13-02-2013, 11:26 PM
Interesting Terry,

What happens if you subtract a spectra of the sun from the comet spectra. Is that a valid way of identifying the "spikes due to the comet"?

DT

Rob_K
16-02-2013, 10:09 AM
Fantastic work Terry, congratulations! :thumbsup:

Here's my effort from this morning - no slit so I thought I'd do better at a wider scale (55mm) to reduce the comet to as small a size as possible. Bad logic, the spectrum reduces in scale too! :rolleyes: Had issues with light cloud, heavy dew & car headlights in getting what I got. The severe vignetting is because I shot with an ordinary camera lens with the grating set in an old lens cap - it acts as a very restrictive aperture mask.

Anyway, pretty pleased, first time I've had a try at a comet. I 'borrowed' your calibration Terry as I haven't done a decent calibration for 55mm shots - thanks.

Cheers -

Terry B
16-02-2013, 04:49 PM
Very good Rob
Interesting that there is no evidence of the UV band in your images. I assume that the camera lens has a UV filter from the coating.

Cheers

Terry

Merlin66
16-02-2013, 05:01 PM
Excellent results!
Well done guys.
It's great to see some first class cometary spectra.
It's obvious from the Swan bands, were the typical "green" comet emits it's light.

Rob_K
22-02-2013, 10:37 PM
Hi Terry - yes, I'd imagine that the filter would cut it. However I've been through the three subs I've got and there does seem to be a faint line there, which I've duly processed out with levels in the posted spectrum to hide noise! :rolleyes:

Of the three subs, the first is by far the best, the other two being badly affected by cloud. So I just processed that sub, this time leaving noise & a stray faint star spectrum in. I've got the probable CN line arrowed in both the image and the bar spectrum. Judging by your spectrum, the Bayer filter on the camera (is it a Bayer filter?) has had a major impact on the CN line or it would be a bright dot in the image. Thanks for pointing this out! :thumbsup:

I'm currently camera-less (waiting on a new DSLR) but I'll try to replicate this when it arrives, hopefully in better skies.

Cheers -