This beautiful object was recently located in the evening sky and early morning sky too. Discovered August 7, 2006 by R. H. McNaught (Siding Spring Survey). It is approaching perihelion on Jan. 11, 2007 and was visible very low on the west horizon immediately after the sunset. It was visible in the daytime sky ( Jan 14, 2007 )& is the brightest comet since 1965. Now having moved southward it is only visible in the southern hemisphere.
Jayson McIvor recalls... "I took these from the Sammamish Plateau, my hometown, just 20 west of Seattle Washington."
"I love astronomy as a whole, though I don't keep up on the latest news that trickles down. I guess you could say I am more of you typical "couch potato" astronomer.
As for taking a picture of the comet, it is pretty rare to be able to see comets, though it seems in my lifetime (30 years old), that I have been blessed with quite a few." "The backdrop of colors was due to
sunset,
the only time in our area when the comet was visible."
Camera Settings:
Nikon D200 using a 105mm f2.5 AIS on a tripod using a remote cord.
Aperture: f-11
Shutter Speed: 2 seconds
ISO: 100

Jayson McIvor recalls... "I took these from the Sammamish Plateau, my hometown, just 20 west of Seattle Washington."
"I love astronomy as a whole, though I don't keep up on the latest news that trickles down. I guess you could say I am more of you typical "couch potato" astronomer.
As for taking a picture of the comet, it is pretty rare to be able to see comets, though it seems in my lifetime (30 years old), that I have been blessed with quite a few." "The backdrop of colors was due to
sunset,
the only time in our area when the comet was visible."
Camera Settings:
Nikon D200 using a 105mm f2.5 AIS on a tripod using a remote cord.
Aperture: f-11
Shutter Speed: 2 seconds
ISO: 100
Nikon D200 |
Original size: 2592x3240 |
Current: 480x600 |
This site features some great images.