[BAA Comets] Fw: Fw: [CometObs] C/2013 X1 outburst ?
denis buczynski
buczynski8166 at btinternet.com
Tue Jan 5 12:16:49 GMT 2016
Hi Mat,Thanks for the information.We are looking at all available data related to this outburst. Can you send Justin images to cometobs at britastro.org or directly to my mail box at buczynski8166 at btinternet.com as our discussion list will not allow posting of images.Best wishes
Denis
From: "mmatti at westnet.com.au" <mmatti at westnet.com.au>
To: BAA Comets discussion list <comets-disc at britastro.org>
Sent: Tuesday, 5 January 2016, 10:21
Subject: Re: [BAA Comets] Fw: Fw: [CometObs] C/2013 X1 outburst ?
Hi Folks,
I understand the caution of calling it an outburst, but the morphology is
indicative of a gasseous eruption, with a brightening amplitude of 1
magnitude and a sharp increase in coma size.
This should follow up with obvious ion tail activity, not yet seen with this
comet. It has been predominately dusty.
Via various visual observers, timing of the outburst appears to have
occurred after Jan 3.07UT:mag 9.7
Jan 3.71UT mag 8.8
Jan 3.87UT mag 8.5
Jan 4.30UT mag 8.4
Jan 4.47UT mag 8.2
Jan 5.32UT mag 8.0
Find attached photos by Justin Tilbrook showing morphology pre and post.
kind regards,
Michael Mattiazzo
-----Original Message-----
From: Shanklin, Jonathan D.
Sent: Tuesday, January 05, 2016 9:57 AM
To: BAA Comets Discussion List ; denis buczynski
Subject: Re: [BAA Comets] Fw: Fw: [CometObs] C/2013 X1 outburst ?
I managed a brief observation this evening, as there was an unexpected
clearance, however cloud encroached again fairly quickly. I made it around
a magnitude brighter than on the 31st, however I was using a different
sequence and conditions were not good. It did not look markedly different,
being a similar DC3 and diameter 4' in the 25x100B. I think it is premature
to say that there is an outburst, as the observations are scattered and
still adequately fitted by a normal light curve, albeit one where the comet
is brightening rapidly. Points to note:
It is still 2au from the sun, and receding from the earth.
Observing conditions and instrument can make a big difference to the
apparent brightness
Different observers have different photometric sensitivities and there can
be a magnitude or more difference in their estimates.
Jonathan Shanklin
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