Tagged: interstellar asteroid
- This topic has 10 replies, 6 voices, and was last updated 1 hour, 43 minutes ago by
Nick James.
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2 July 2025 at 10:00 am #630440
Dr Paul Leyland
ParticipantAn interstellar asteroid with an orbital eccentricity of around 6 has recently been discovered. At the moment it is around magnitude 18.2 and getting brighter. More information at https://cneos.jpl.nasa.gov/scout/#/object/A11pl3Z
The sky may be a bit bright for observers up here in the sub-arctic but observers further south, and those using remote telescopes, may wish to take images of the asteroid, measure them, and submit the results to the MPC. The orbit still needs refining. I wish I was in La Palma …
Paul
2 July 2025 at 12:12 pm #630441Grant Privett
ParticipantBlast! And with my pier in pieces…
Anyone near Salisbury with an SDS drill? 🙂
2 July 2025 at 6:27 pm #630445Nick James
ParticipantYes, this is a very interesting object that appears to be brightening quite rapidly so it could be cometary (I hope). We’ll have plenty of time to observe it but not when it is at perihelion since it is at inferior conjunction then. I’m preparing a news note and will upload it later. Astrometry will be very useful but the arc (with precoveries) is already long enough to give us a pretty stable orbit solution. It is definitely interstellar with a rather high approach velocity.
For now, beware the most planetarium programs will break with elements that have e=6!
2 July 2025 at 7:11 pm #630446Nick James
ParticipantIn case anyone needs an ephemeris for the next few days I’ve just generated this from Findorb. It is for Rio Hurtado, Chile but the parallax is small so it will work for anywhere.
The current elements from Findorb using all of the astrometry on the NEOCP are:
<plaintext>Orbital elements: A11pl3Z Perihelion 2025 Oct 29.67795 +/- 0.216 TT = 16:16:14 (JD 2460978.17795) Epoch 2025 Jul 2.0 TT = JDT 2460858.5 Earth MOID: 0.3549 Ju: 0.2479 q 1.34626730 +/- 0.0133 Ma: 0.0201 Sa: 0.4082 Find_Orb H 11.91 G 0.15 Peri. 128.11453 +/- 0.14 z -3.7575161799 +/- 0.0375 Node 322.06864 +/- 0.10 e 6.0586211 +/- 0.1 Incl. 175.10933 +/- 0.0044 111 of 113 observations 2025 June 14-July 2; mean residual 0".37</plaintext>
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This reply was modified 13 hours, 27 minutes ago by
Nick James.
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This reply was modified 13 hours, 26 minutes ago by
Nick James.
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2 July 2025 at 7:36 pm #630450Nick Haigh
ParticipantI got an ephemeris from a link on cloudy nights earlier and it seems to be perfectly placed, if a bit south at -18deg. Elongation 170degrees, near the galactic centre. Blue sky now and I’m going to image this tonight if its the last thing I do. At mag 18.5 should be a walk in the park, an hour should burn it into the sensor. So excited!
2 July 2025 at 8:19 pm #630451Nick James
ParticipantGood luck Nick. Yes, 18.5 should be relatively easy even that low down. I have a tree in that direction that blocks my main telescope so I’ll have to go remote.
Who’s going to be the first person to get an interstellar object with a Seestar?
Nick.
2 July 2025 at 11:05 pm #630453Denis Buczynski
ParticipantThis object has now been officially designated as an interstellar comet
Now officially announced as 3I/ATLAS = C/2025 N1 (ATLAS)
https://minorplanetcenter.net/mpec/K25/K25N12.html2 July 2025 at 11:18 pm #630456Nick James
ParticipantThe detection of cometary activity is really exciting. It looks as if this object will be brighter than mag 20 for the next year or so and it will be well placed for us in the northern hemisphere after perihelion. A great opportunity to study something from another star system.
2 July 2025 at 11:43 pm #630457Helen Usher
ParticipantWe’re getting our Comet Chasers on it. It is well timed as we’ve got a photo shoot for a new space magazine lined up for Friday, so that will add some special interest 😎
3 July 2025 at 1:19 am #630460Nick Haigh
ParticipantImage attached! – about 90 mins of 10sec unfiltered subs with the 12″ newt and ASI294MM camera. Looks diffuse in one direction, but i dont quite trust my collimation, so im not calling it just yet!!!
Image is 3.84′ wide – 0.8″ pixels.
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This reply was modified 7 hours, 17 minutes ago by
Nick Haigh.
3 July 2025 at 6:55 am #630463Nick James
ParticipantNick – Great image.
Here’s mine. I can’t get that far south with my main scope due to a neighbour’s tree. This is from Chile:
https://britastro.org/observations/observation.php?id=20250703_055356_fc54046de537751b
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