C 2014 C3 NEOWISE





COMET C/2014 C3 (NEOWISE)
James Bauer, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, reports
the discovery of a comet
on stacked 3.4- and 4.6-micron images (discovery
observations tabulated below)
obtained with the Near-Earth Object Wide-field
Infrared Survey Explorer (or
NEOWISE; formerly the WISE satellite), the
object described as extended with a
tail approximately 30" due west; the
estimated R-band magnitude based on
preliminary analysis is around
16.
2014 UT R.A. (2000) Decl.
Feb. 14.70973 15
29 12.48 -18 03 42.5
15.17082 15 28 22.12 -17 51
48.3
After the object was posted on the Minor Planet Center's NEOCP and
PCCP
webpages, ground-based CCD astrometrists have also commented on the
object's
cometary appearance. J.-F. Soulier writes that stacked images taken
with a
0.4-m f/8 Ritchey-Chretien telescope at San Pedro de Atacama, Chile,
on
Feb. 19.31-19.39 UT show a coma of size 15" x 17" with a 53" tail
having
structures spanning p.a. 313-200 deg; the magnitude was given as 17.5
in a
5".5 aperture. T. Lister notes that nine stacked 65-s V-band images
taken
on Feb. 19.4 with a 1.0-m f/8 Ritchey-Chretien reflector (Las
Cumbres
Observatory Global Telescope) at Cerro Tololo show a diffuse coma
about 9" in
diameter with central condensation and magnitude
18.6-18.7.
The available astrometry, the following parabolic orbital
elements by G. V.
Williams, and an ephemeris appear on MPEC
2014-D11.
T = 2014 Jan. 17.8514 TT Peri. = 346.4752
Node =
204.4705 2000.0
q = 1.867545 AU
Incl. = 151.8317
NOTE: These 'Central Bureau
Electronic Telegrams' are sometimes
superseded by text appearing later
in the printed IAU Circulars.
(C) Copyright 2014
CBAT
2014
February 20
(CBET 3810) Daniel W.
E. Green
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