By now interest in Comet C/2012 S1 (Comet ISON) is building. This could be the most dramatic comet in years. Where should we look for this oncoming interloper from deep space? This was a monthly guide aimed at observers in the UK and Ireland to help you find it. As of December 2013 the comet appears to have broken up and will not be seen in our skies after all.
To find the comet on any given day and date, I really recommend the free software Stellarium (available from our Free Stuff page). You will need to use the update database feature to add ISON to Stellarium, but this is very straightforward to do.
You can learnˆà 10 Things You Need to know About Comet ISON elsewhere in this blog. Please note that this comet will never be brighter than a full Moon (anyone saying this is using very out of date information) and definitely will never appear larger in the sky than a full Moon, and remember that the behaviour of comets is notoriously unpredictable! Veteran comet watcher John Bortle discussed the possible visibility of Comet ISON in an interesting piece at Universe Today, and cautioned against excessive optimism.
August
From early June through lateAugust, Comet ISON was almost directly behind the Sun as viewed from Earth, and so it could not be seen. In early August, ISON is approaching the Solar System’s so-called “frost line” some 370 to 450 million km (230 to 280 million miles) from the Sun, when it reaches this region the comet’s nucleus will receive enough solar radiation that water will begin to evaporate making comet will appear brighter. From Earth the comet will appear in the constellation Gemini. It will be low in the bright ˆàpre-sunrise eastern sky, you will still need a telescope to see it. On 2 August about 5am, we will be treated to a celestial line-up of Comet ˆàISON, Mercury, Mars, Jupiter and the Moon. From the middle of August ISON will be in Cancer and by the end of August it may be visible for observers with larger telescopes. At the end of the month the comet will appear just above M44, the Beehive Cluster. On 12 August the comet was recovered (that is, seen for the first after it emerged from behind the Sun) by Bruce Gary, an amateur astronomer in Arizona.
September
By now the comet ought to be an easy object for amateur telescopes. In early September the comet will appear close to Mars in the sky before dawn. On 1 September at about 5am,Cometˆà ISON, Mars and the crescent Moon made a line in the sky. By mid September you will find the speeding up comet between Cancer and Leo and by the end of September it will be in Leo. By late September Comet ISON had developed a greenish tinge to its coma indicating more material was escaping from the nucleus.
October
On 1 October Comet ˆàISON was at its closest to Mars at about 11 million km where various probes scanned the sky for it. The comet was still not bright enough to spot with binoculars from Earth. ˆàEarly in the month, ISON was close to the bright star Regulus and both Mars and the Moon was close by too. By 15 October Regulus, Mars and ISON were tightly grouped and easy to find with suitable equipment, the comet was about Magnitude 12 or so, which was far too dim to be seen without a telescope. At the end of October, the comet was below ˆàLeo, heading down the sky towards Virgo.
November
So far the comet has been disappointing, being just visible as a feeble smudge through 16 inch telescopes in early November but this will hopefully be the start of ISONòÀÙs glory days. At the beginning of November when the comet was between Virgo and Leo, it showed new activity, developing an ion tail and reaching Mag 8 (visible in the morning sky through larger binoculars) reaching Virgo by the middle of the month. On 11 November the comet crossed the orbit of Venus, andˆà suddenly increased in brightness! In just over a day the comet’s apparent magnitude improved by two magnitudes. By 16 November, it was a faint but visible object in the pre-dawn south-eastern sky to the unaided eye.ˆà It was an even more fascinating sight for observers with telescopes. By the third week of November it was be seen in the eastern sky before dawn.ˆà By the fourth week of November the comet is so close to the Sun that it will be almost sunrise before its head clears the horizon, so viewing it at all at this time was impossible.
If you cannot see Comet ISON why not try to find the other near-naked eye comet currently in the sky, C/2013 R1 Lovejoy? Try looking at any time of the night at the Plough (the famous asterism in Ursa Major), this comet will be be close to the Plough’s handle . Comet Lovejoy is impossible to see with the unaided eye, so you will need to use binoculars. You are looking for a faint fuzzy star.
Comet ISON is at its closest to the Sun (perihelion) on 28 November (Thanksgiving Day in the USA), when it ˆàis just a million km or so above our star. It had been thought that if the comet’s brightness increased according to the most optimistic predictions on this day it might be possible to see the comet in the daytime.ˆà The comet’s failure to get brighter at the rate originally predicted means it was actually impossible to view it like this.
What happens during this phase of the comet’s orbit determines how visible it will appear to us. The intense radiation of the Sun caused material to explosively evaporate off the comet. This could have meant the comet would rapidly brighten and develop a more impressive tail, delighting observers, and for a short time this seemed to be happening. Then on 26 November, it was looking increasing like a worst case scenario, to spacecraft the comet seemed to be disintegrating as it moved closer to the Sun, apparently turning into a plume of debris that could rapidly disperse.ˆà However after perihelion a small, much-diminished nucleus was seen to round the Sun. It was the end of the show for amateur observers yet as ISON is to all intents and purposes dead.
December
It is now impossible to see this dead comet, but during December 2013 the remains of Comet ISON will be in both the morning and evening sky as it races through the constellations. In early December after 7am it will betweenˆà between Libra and Ophiuchus, a couple of weeks later it will be between Serpens and Hercules, on 22 December it will be in Hercules ˆànear the globular cluster M13. By 25 December it will be close to the Plough, and is circumpolar from UK and Ireland, meaning it will be in the sky all night long. Onˆà 26-27 December, ISON will be at its closestˆà to Earth at 64 million km. At the end of December the comet is in Draco and will beˆà in the north west by evening, in the morning sky before before sunrise in east. Sadly we will not be able to see it.
January 2014
On 6 January 2014 Comet ISON’s debris will be near Polaris.
(UPDATE:ˆàArticle last updated on 1 December 2013.)
(Article by Colin Johnston, Science Communicator)
Hi Colin,
That’s a useful and sensible synopsis. Experienced observers might want to try making a special portable round opaque screen to block out the Sun, so that you don’t have to rely on finding a building in just the right place! But as you say, you need to be very careful when observing the sky anywhere near the Sun, especially with telescopes or binoculars.
I’ll be heading to Tenerife in late November to get a better view: the angle of the comet to the Sun and the horizon will be better the further South you are. And even if it fails to live up to the most optimistic predictions, it willl be a nice winter holiday anyway!
Terry
Good luck Terry!
I’ll be heading to Tenerife in late december, i imagine ill have missed it though by then!
“On 1 October Comet ISON is at its closest to Mars at about 63 million km”.
I make it less than 11 million km. Who’s right, you or me?
You’re right! I’ve no idea how that got in there, but I’ve fixed the mistake! Thank you!
Incoming path can be verified but out going return path NOT SUre ,
Could a Comet Hit Mars in 2014 òÀÓ NOWAY òÀÓ It reach to close encounter to MARS in OCTO òÀÓ Nove 2013 òÀÓ And QUOITE far from MARS. Distance of comet requires closer than the 2.5 X Diameter of Mars to divert the comet towards the Mars to collapseòÀæ. Which is not possible but you may go to Mars to see ths close view of Comet ISON 2012
Mars and Comet C/2012 S1 ISON will be within two degrees of each other in the morning sky in September 2013 and within one degree of each other in October 2013.See more
Could a Comet Hit Mars in 2014?
http://www.space.com
The newfound comet C/2013 A1 (Siding Spring) has only a slim chance if hitting Mars.
2013-Oct-01 17:28 00:01 Mars 0.0724878576835433 AU
2013-Dec-26 22:42 00:01 Earth 0.429220399673719 AU
Science Groups sciencegroupofindia@indiatimes.com
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/kutchscience/
òÀÜWhere Is Comet ISON In The Sky? | AstronotesòÀÝ was a great article and also I personally was indeed
quite pleased to locate the article. Thanks a lot-Von
This is awsome and i was thinking that intead of blocking out the sun with a building to see it in november you could just use a welding mask or a filter (only a couple of quid for a filter try ebay) this way you can really see the edges of the sun without any glaire and make it possible to see the comets tail. All we need is clear skys :/
Sorry, but this won’t work. The Sun is many, many times brighter that the comet. A filter heavy enough block out enough sunlight to make it safe to look at the Sun will not allow you to see the comet too.
Please note that you need No14 or higher welders glass to safely observe the Sun. A NASA site says “Do not view through any welding glass if you do not know or cannot discern its shade number. Be advised that arc welders typically use glass with a shade much less than the necessary #14. A welding glass that permits you to see the landscape is not safe. ”
We strongly advise against viewing the Sun without professional equipment.
I know this is for the UK but this has got to be the ONLY informative page I have come across, well done and thank you. I wish I could find such an informative page about Comet Ison and where it will be in the sky for Ontario, Canada. No such luck yet, but your dates and times have helped out a lot since we are in the northern hemisphere as well. I know they will not be exact, but, they will help me out significantly. Again thank you so much for writing this and sharing it with everyone.
I think I have seen the comet with the naked eye this morning. I noticed a distinctive smudge with the brightest part towards the horizon, and a tail towards the zenith in the pre-dawn sky in the location you have stated!
I’m sorry but it’s still too faint and small to be seen with the unaided eye. I’m not sure what you saw but I’m glad you’re looking!
It definitely looked like a comet. I can remember Hale-Bopp and Halley, and both of them looked just like what I saw. I may have mistaken a jet contrail for it, however, as I am still not used to the insane traffic jam above my head 24/7 as I now live in south eastern London – I also saw over a dozen Jets doing a complicated choreograph, Air traffic control must be stressful here!
BTW it was dark enough to see the Orion Nebula clearly, and even the haze of smaller stars in the Pleiedes.
I live in South East London too, and although off-topic, the air-traffic here is insane. I recently did a time-lapse of the evening skies from about 7-10pm and the resulting trails of lights completely blank out the sky.
Unfortunately, my view looks North, so don’t think I’ll be catching ISON at any point!
Hey, the January 2014 one will be on my birthday (January 6 2014).
I’ve had Stellarium for some time and this week I updated all the star charts, but it still doesn’t recognize ISON or C/2012. Is there an extra plug-in or something I should be installing?
Try the steps at this link, hopefully this will help you.
It’s the 13th of November today, and the last photograph says it’s from the 15th of November. Timetravel?
No, it’s the magic of Stellarium!
I used the Stellarium software to produce an image of what the sky will look like at that time and date, sorry if that was not clear.
Is there a chance it could hit the earth or sun I hope not I’m having nightmares bout it and can’t sleep
There is absolutely no possibility that this comet will hit our planet or the Sun.
IM HAVING NIGHTMARES THAT IT WONT HIT THE EARTH. – DEPRESSED ED.
I’m not sure why you’re having nightmares, because no part of ISON is going to hit Earth.
I was just outside and convinced I can see Ison in the sky. I even downloaded a compass to make sure I wasn’t looking at the north star and more it was definitely in the right position you have said.
That seems to have done the trick, thanks
This is so exciting to our family. We will be observing any chance we get since our family name is Ison! Fun fun!
Hello all.
If comets are indeed balls of compacted ice how can anybody reasonably expect them to survive a pass through the suns corona, which is millions of degrees?
Surely this is not possible for a ball of ice. The physics just doesn’t work. In a vacuum the boiling point of water is also reduced so how can any comet made of ice survive this?
This assumption by NASA makes no sense whatsoever.
Furthermore NASA’s temple 1 impactor behaved in several unexpected ways.
The bright flash on impact that left mission control stood there on tv going “wth was that?”
The unexpected electrical interference with the camera on the impactor, which increased as the probe got closer.
The evidence of surface erosion that should not have been there.
Add to this,
The lightening/plasma filaments in Damien Peach’s latest pictures.
Electric comet theory explains all of these features, actually predicting them in some cases.
Does this theory have any merit?
The corona is hot but every cubic metre of corona contains about a billionth of a gram of matter, that’s way too low a density to transfer any significant heat to a body moving through it.
Ice can indeed exist in a vacuum, see Europa, the rings and moons of Saturn.
I believe that comet’s nucleus was dustier than expected, leading to a more spectacular impact plume than predicted. Thus proving the value of sending probes to Solar System bodies.
Can you supply any references for the electrical events? I can only find them mentioned on sites where the content seems less than reliable.
I think these, lightning especially, are in the eyes of the beholder!
As far I understand it, “electric comet theory” is a branch of “electric universe theory” which also claims the Sun is a ball of molten iron, that Venus was ejected from Jupiter in historical times and Earth was once a moon of Saturn. Scientists find these ideas worse than wrong.
I am interested to know how Comet Ison got its name?
From 10 Things You Need to Know About Comet ISON
ISON is named after the International Scientific Optical Network, used by a pair of Russian astronomers to detect the comet in September last year. But it officially is known as C/2012 S1, a designation indicating when it was discovered.
I know that comet ison is very significant for many reasons and we are being told to look out for this tiny object in the night sky. In 1962 or 1963 (a long time ago now) my brother and I observed an object the size of a full moon that came into view for about 10 seconds on our way home one evening when it was not yet dark in a clear autumn sky. My brother is eighteen months older than myself and it still sends a shiver up my spine to this day when I talk about it. Having been brought up in the country we were used to shooting stars and the milky way. This object has baffled me for most of my life but no one can even begin to explain what it was. Any ideas? I observed hale bop a few years ago with its tail. The object we observed was out in space, massive and as I said looked like our moon and was cratered with no tail. It moved up from the horizon into the heavens in an ark and at about the 2 o’clock position it appeared to move away so fast that it became a dot in an instant. We just stood there stunned.
Dear Richard, your description of your sighting is fascinating but I have no idea what you saw. Sorry I can’t be more helpful.
Hi,
I seem to find myself in the Middle East for every significant celestial event which happens during my lifetime (solar eclipse of 1999 and Hale Bopp in ’97) and as I saw the comet from an aeroplane as I flew to Abu Dhabi but the eclipse was not total.
Anyway, will ISON be visible to me in Eastern Province Saudi Arabia? Can’t seem to find anything about viewing it from Middle Eastern locations anywhere on the Net.
Many thanks in advance (and excitement!)
Sam
It will be visible from Saudi Arabia, but note at the moment it is lost in the Sun’s glare. It ought to become easier to see in ten days or so as it moves away from the Sun (and assuming it survives perihelion). To find in the sky I really recommend you download Stellarium (free!) and add Comet ISON to it (which is easy).
Where do we look in the night sky so we can pin point where to see it, because i wouldnt want to miss this fir the world?!!!!!!!
Dear Max, as I’ve been saying at the moment it is so close to the Sun that it is lost in the SunòÀÙs glare and impossible to see. It ought to become easier to see in ten days or so as it moves away from the Sun (and assuming it survives perihelion). I will keep updating this site with the latest on its visibility, but to find it in the sky I really recommend you download Stellarium (free!) and add Comet ISON to it (which is easy).
I live in the Southern tip of Indiana. At what time on Thursday will I be able to see the comet?
Dear Peggy, at the moment it is so close to the Sun that it is lost in the SunòÀÙs glare and impossible to see. It ought to become easier to see in ten days or so as it moves away from the Sun (and assuming it survives perihelion). I will keep updating this site with the latest on its visibility, but to find it in the sky I really recommend you download Stellarium (free!) and add Comet ISON to it (which is easy).
is it possible to see comet ison here in philippines w/ naked eye only?if its yes,when?thanks
Hi Erjohn, the comet was visible from the Philippines but at the moment it is so close to the Sun that it is lost in the SunòÀÙs glare and impossible to see. It ought to become easier to see in ten days or so as it moves away from the Sun (and assuming it survives perihelion). I will keep updating this site with the latest on its visibility, but to find it in the sky I really recommend you download Stellarium (free!) and add Comet ISON to it (which is easy).
Will it be possible to see comet ISON from Blackpool UK if so when and at what times..Thanks
Please see my response to the comments above yours. Thanks.
hello,
i have seen it on 24 and 25th morning near about 7 am from india but on today ie 28th november i didnt see anything i just want to know
I have tried the link you put up for someone else so I could put ISON into the Stellarium App, but to no avail. It won’t recognise it. What am I doing wrong? Don’t wanna miss this comet.
Did ISON survive? this is the question all us astronomers have on their lips…after looking on the net there seems to be mixed answers to the question…when will we know…it is probably still in the glare of the sun at the moment, however we should have our answer very soon and personally I am hoping it will be the answer we want…I am so impatient as I really want to get a look at this.
great site, appreciate your patient replies, thankyou for the time and effort you have made to help people understand and locate this, hopefully, dazzling phenomena, we will see, but thanks to you, more of us will know where to look. Heads up look east just before Sunrise, don’t look directly at Sun not even with a darkened lens or glasses. It should be close to the Sun as it is rising, shouldn’t it?
Then somewhere near The Plough, Big Dipper, or Canis Major, in the night time , is this right also?
Hi Colin, Thanks for keeping us updated. Do you know if the remains of ISON will be bright enough to be seen the with naked eye or binoculars?
I’m sorry to say this not going to be possible, the comet’s nucleus has crumbled to dust so there’s nothing to see. It’s a disappointing end to the ‘Comet of the Century’.
Yeah, I thought so
Hi, whilst driving to Sch yesterday at 8.25am (18th December) my children and myself definitely saw what looked like a comet in the sky.
Thank for sharing your observations, sorry to say that it wasn’t a comet as at the moment there aren’t any visible to the unaided eye. Once I thought I’d discovered a comet in the early morning sky, but it was an aircraft’s contrail illuminated by the rays of the rising Sun. It did really look like a comet though! Maybe you saw something similar.
What a shame my kids were so excited. Thanks for replying