Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

To photograph comet Neowise, it takes patience and placement

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Jul, 2020 10:31 PM
  • To photograph comet Neowise, it takes patience and placement

The newly discovered comet Neowise is only visible from Earth once every 6,800 years, and photographers who want to document it seek places with high elevation and little smog or light pollution. A place like North Carolina’s famed Grandfather Mountain.

On a recent weekend, Associated Press photographer Gerry Broome was granted special after-hours access to the iconic peak to accompany photographer and amateur astronomer Johnny Horne on a trip to make images of the comet discovered in March.

The moment came on a Saturday night when Comet Neowise first appeared as a tiny smudge in the northern sky. A pair of binoculars revealed its tail of gas and dust. It was just past 9:30 p.m., and the northern sky had cleared enough to spot the comet with the naked eye. It was as if the heavens opened up and provided a celestial show that wouldn’t be repeated in our lifetimes and for many to come.

“If we don’t attempt to experience these natural wonders, we never see any of them except by chance. I’d rather be deliberate about it,” said Horne, who has travelled to Australia to photograph Halley’s comet, Zambia and Mexico’s Baja peninsula for eclipses and Iceland for the northern lights. The retired news photographer and photo editor, who spent 44 years at The Fayetteville Observer, has contributed to Sky & Telescope magazine since the 1990s.

To see Neowise, Grandfather Mountain was chosen for its clear view at an elevation of nearly 6,000 feet (1,828 metres) But to benefit from the view, the weather has to co-operate. On Friday night, a giant thundercloud blocked the view on Grandfather Mountain as the comet appeared, thwarting the attempts to photograph it.

But on Saturday, both photographers were successful -- Broome atop the mountain again this time, and Horne at a lower elevation.

According to NASA, the nucleus of the comet is three miles (4.8 kilometres) across. It emits a tail of dust and possibly two tails of gas as it moves through space at around 144,000 mph (232,000 kph). Now making its way back toward the outer solar system, the comet has come as close as 64 million miles (103 million kilometres) to Earth.

The comet should remain visible through the end of July and possibly into August across the Northern Hemisphere. It is visible to the naked eye and can be spotted below the Big Dipper, but a good pair of binoculars or a telescope will enhance your view. A clear night with limited light pollution is important for success.

It's named for the NASA spacecraft, Neowise, that first spotted it.

MORE Interesting ARTICLES

See Pics: London Model Whose Face Was 'Melted' In An Acid Attack Looks Ethereally Beautiful Today

See Pics: London Model Whose Face Was 'Melted' In An Acid Attack Looks Ethereally Beautiful Today
The acid-attack survivor who shared her post-recovery photos gets painfully honest in her latest post

See Pics: London Model Whose Face Was 'Melted' In An Acid Attack Looks Ethereally Beautiful Today

'Handsome' Pakistani Teacher Fired From Job Because His Moustache Gave Students 'Liberal Ideas'

'Handsome' Pakistani Teacher Fired From Job Because His Moustache Gave Students 'Liberal Ideas'
A teacher, Haseeb Ali Chishti, was sacked from his post at the school he was working at, and it was attributed to the fact that his moustache gave "liberal ideas" to students. 

'Handsome' Pakistani Teacher Fired From Job Because His Moustache Gave Students 'Liberal Ideas'

Braving The Storm: This Couple's Wedding Photo During Hurricane Harvey Has Gone Viral

Braving The Storm: This Couple's Wedding Photo During Hurricane Harvey Has Gone Viral
Texas couple, Shelley and Chris Holland, who lost everything before their D-day due to Hurricane Harvey still made it through and exchanged vows with the help of their close ones during the storm.

Braving The Storm: This Couple's Wedding Photo During Hurricane Harvey Has Gone Viral

Noida School Boy Loses 25% Hearing After Getting Slapped In A Slap Bet. Video Goes Viral.

Noida School Boy Loses 25% Hearing After Getting Slapped In A Slap Bet. Video Goes Viral.
A video, now going viral on social media, shows a school student slapping his classmate across the cheek at the Pathways School, Noida. 

Noida School Boy Loses 25% Hearing After Getting Slapped In A Slap Bet. Video Goes Viral.

Open Challege: Write A Computer Code To Solve This Chess Puzzle And Win $1 Million

Open Challege: Write A Computer Code To Solve This Chess Puzzle And Win $1 Million
Devised in 1850, the Queens Puzzle originally challenged a player to place eight queens on a standard chessboard so that no two queens could attack each other.

Open Challege: Write A Computer Code To Solve This Chess Puzzle And Win $1 Million

101-Yr-Old Sprinter Man Kaur Seeks Votes For Prestigious Laureus Award

The 101-year-old Chandigarh-based Man Kaur is among the six contenders. She had won the 100 metre sprint at the World Masters Games in Auckland earlier this year.

101-Yr-Old Sprinter Man Kaur Seeks Votes For Prestigious Laureus Award