Green comet 2023

2023 - 1 - 31

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Image courtesy of "Open Access Government"

'Green comet' to pass close to Earth for the first time in 50000 years (Open Access Government)

Scientists believe this because the orbits of long-period comets are so long, leading them to assume it is from the very furthest part of the solar system. The ...

From the 30th to the 31st of January, it headed near the star Polaris constellation. Another thing that makes the comet special is its green glow, thought to have come from an interaction between light from the sun and diatomic carbon. The distance from the Sun to the Oort Cloud is so enormous that it’s not even described in the units of miles or kilometres, but in astronomical units.

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Image courtesy of "AS English"

Green Comet 2023: When and where are the best places to see it in ... (AS English)

The “Green Comet”, last seen when Neanderthals walked the Earth, is at its easiest to see with the naked eye, but you'll want someplace dark. Here's where…

You will be looking for a faint fuzzy ball in the sky, unfortunately the tail will not be visible, nor will you be able to see the green hue with the naked eye, and most likely neither with binoculars. You’ll want to go out to the countryside where there little to no city lighting, even then without binoculars or a telescope it will be a challenge. [the path it is following](https://en.as.com/latest_news/when-and-where-can-you-see-the-green-comet-from-the-united-states-n/), of the space between the North Star and the cup of the Big Dipper. Generally, only those who live in the Northern Hemisphere will have an opportunity to see this astronomical event. Here’s where you’ll have the best opportunity to see the celestial phenomenon. This means that you will need to seek out some place with very little light pollution, and even then, due to its faintness will be difficult to see.

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Image courtesy of "The Independent"

Green comet 2023 – live: How best to see 'awesome' E3 in sky ... (The Independent)

C/2022 E3 (ZTF) comet is visible with the naked eye from certain locations on Tuesday night.

For a few weeks it will also be possible to see it using binoculars or a telescope. The comet made its closest approach to Earth in the early hours of 1 February, 2023. “On March 2nd, all we knew was that we had found a moving object. The green comet C/2022 E3 (ZTF) making its closest pass by Earth today originated from the Oort Cloud, a cosmic shell of debris encircling the farthest reaches of the Solar System. The early hours of 1 February will see Comet ZTF reach its perigee, meaning it is at its closest point to Earth, but it will still be visible with the naked eye for the next few days in case you don’t get a chance to see it tonight. At its perigee on Tuesday night and early Wednesday morning, the green comet had a brightness value of the magnitude of about +4.7, meaning it was possible to see it with the naked eye.

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Image courtesy of "New York Post"

How to see the 2023 green comet from wherever you are (New York Post)

It's been a while since we last laid eyes on this rare green comet — about 50000 years, to be exact — which swings by Earth at 26 million miles away on Feb.

[In the Sky](https://in-the-sky.org/news.php?id=20230201_19_100), the comet will be highest in the sky at around 9:45 p.m. Astronomers explained that the phenomenon isn’t actually part of the comet, though it once was. Local forecasts will determine which viewers are in the best position for stargazing. Viewfinders should be pointed toward the constellation Camelopardalis. It was first detected less than a year ago by astronomers at the National Science Foundation’s Zwicky Transient Facility in California. Now, it returns to Earth’s orbit for a once-in-a-lifetime event, 50 millennia in the making.

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Image courtesy of "NorthJersey.com"

Curious green comet is paying us a visit. Here's how to see it (NorthJersey.com)

C/2022 E3 (ZTF) is a comet — which is rare enough. A green one, which is rarer still. And one that, just maybe, could be visible from your backyard, using the ...

"You have to remember this comet is moving through the sky," Sasse said. "And keep in mind, you're not going to see this comet again." "You would think, with the tail stretching out, that it's behind," Swangin said. But C/2022 E3 (ZTF), for us humans, is a one-off. When it's receding, the tail is — oxymoronically — in front. "It would be kind of a green smudge," Swangin said. The comet will be in that area of the sky. Just visit the website, put in the comet's name and make a reservation, Sasse said. "We're improving the software, so it becomes just like using a cellphone now," said Christian Sasse, general manager and astronomer in charge of itelescope. You may want to rest yours on a fence post or table to steady the image. C/2022 E3 (ZTF) is a comet — which is rare enough. "That's less than the distance Venus would be from us," Swangin said.

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Image courtesy of "The San Diego Union-Tribune"

Ancient "green' comet will be visible for next three nights (The San Diego Union-Tribune)

The comet is roughly a half-mile wide, has a soft greenish glow, and last passed close to the Earth during the Stone Age. You'll need binoculars or a ...

The last three letters refer to the Zwicky Transient Facility, which is part of Palomar Observatory. You’ll need binoculars or a telescope to get a good view. The roughly half-mile wide comet, which was last visible from Earth during the Stone Age, can be found 30 degrees above the northern horizon, between the Big Dipper and Polaris.

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