Hi all
Just now, while looking over a deep image of the Helix nebula with Bert's Flourite 300mm f2.8 lens, I found this comet Helin-Roman-Alu 1 (2005) Even picked up its tail
I wasnt intending to image the comet, thinking it was too faint and far from the helix to worry about.
The image is 9x6 mins ISO 400 in skies as dark as it gets for Newcastle, with UHC S filter, modded 350D.
Scott
PS, info on this comet http://www.aerith.net/comet/weekly/current.html
There is a second object in your picture Scott that is not in the picture I took of the same field (Aug292006). I marked it with a fine line.
Bottom right corner pic below. To the right of the line
Bert
Howdy, Ive identified the other object, its galaxy ESO533-048. B magnitude of 13.7. Ive attached a full res. image, along with a similar scale map from Star Atlas Pro.
Scott
PS, good work, Bert for spotting it
This is how lucky I was to get this comet. Back in June Id noted that Star Atlas pro showed the comet as near the Helix Nebula, but was moving away, I didnt do the Plot Path function in Star Atlas pro long enough to realise it was going to loop back round. I just did that today, running 7 day intervals back from June, see attached image. Rectangle is approx. coverage of Bert's 300mm lens on my 350D camera, so anyone whose been imaging the helix from may to june with a field wider then mine may have caught the comet. Might be worth going over the images just in case
Scott
No not that one. Here is the same area of my picture next to yours. It should now be obvious, the elongated object below the green arrowhead. Where was Ceres when your picture was taken? Check your individual exposures to see if the object was moving.
Howdy.
I dont think its Ceres as Ive done a plotted path of it here.
I belive that NGC 7310 is there too. It matches where Star Atlas pro indicated it is.
Scott
No not that one. Here is the same area of my picture next to yours. It should now be obvious, the elongated object below the green arrowhead. Where was Ceres when your picture was taken? Check your individual exposures to see if the object was moving.
Bert
It does seem elongated, maybe it's an asteroid? I'll pass this along to Dave Herald, a rather well known asteroid/minor planet hunter here in Canberra for his comment.