Comet Q2 Lovejoy
Taken by Maximilian Teodorescu on January 7, 2015 @ Comana, Romania
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Date Taken: 2015:01:08 01:33:19
 
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A superb evening of comet observations under the Moonlight. This is how I could summarize the two hours of photographing comet C/2014 Q2 (Lovejoy) in one sentence. Together with Claudiu, my long-time friend and Space enthusiast, I’ve went to the Comana Woods (Giurgiu, Romania) under a clear sky with freezing temperatures (-14 degrees Celsius), to catch comet Lovejoy before the Moonrise. Despite arriving with 30 minutes in advance, the actual “shooting” for the comet began only 10 minutes before the Moon started to fill the sky with it’s light. But, due to the very clear atmosphere, we still saw the comet with the naked eye even after the Moon was getting 10 degrees up above the horizon. The view through 20×80 binoculars and a small 60mm refractor showed only the bright Mag. +4 head, while the tail was visible only on the 120 second shots with a 65mm F/6.5 APO refractor and Canon 550D. 18 such shots were eventually combined into a single image showing the complex tail of this lovely comet. The scene of the imaging session was the better show for the night: the Moon with Jupiter near-by rising in the East, Orion up towards the South, and comet Lovejoy visible to the right of Rigel. The image attached (a panoramic shot using 6 images acquired with the Canon 550D camera and a Canon 18-55mm lens at 15 sec and ISO800) shows just that, with the “observers” looking towards the comet, while the main imaging setup was getting covered by ice crystals. The second image has the comet’s position marked, and some other objects (heavenly or otherwise) named as well, plus an inset with the comet’s image (resulted from a series of 18x120s frames at ISO1600 through the 65mm APO refractor) showing the tail of the comet rather well despite the intense Moonlight. In the next few days, the Moon will not interfere, so I hope to acquire a far better image of this Winter-comet.
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Comments
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Beautiful imaging of the comet Lovejoy, Maximilian!

Also Thank you for your extensive and well informing report of the optics and your camera used. Its nice to see these stories so descriptive of the actual scene.

I have been out in the past couple nights struggling with clouds and fog, experimenting with various camera lenses, and tracking tests on my equatorial drive telescope to get the best images. Tonight may be the best opportunity here in Oregon so far, as weather improves greatly now.

Best regards,

Mark Seibold, Retired IT Specialist, Artist-Astronomer, Portland/Sandy Oregon USA
Posted by markseibold 2015-01-07 18:34:36
Great work and nice photo, can hardly wait for the we(s)t coast weather to improve to finally see the comet with the unaided eye.

Miki
Posted by MikiBee 2015-01-08 00:11:20
Thank you Mark for the kind words! The description of the scene and the images attached to it are the ones that bring back the memories of an event, not a stacked image of the comet in this case. This was the reason of the long story above. This is how I remember comet Hale-Bopp also, despite not having shot a single photo of that comet.
Have a dark and clear sky for this comet!

Max
Posted by MaximilianT 2015-01-08 03:12:35
Thank you Miki! Hope for you to see the comet with the naked eye, and do not forget to have binoculars or a small refractor with you to see the coma of the comet better!

Clear skies,
Max
Posted by MaximilianT 2015-01-08 03:16:03
 
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