by Ann » Sun Dec 23, 2012 6:42 am
Ah, dear old Hale Bopp!
Here in Sweden most people think that Hale-Bopp is a cellphone. But I remember the comet well. You could see it for months, or at least it felt like that. As I kept looking at the comet, I realized not only how slowly the comet seemed to move, but also how quickly the Moon moved across the Earth's sky. The difference, of course, was not that Hale Bopp was slow and the Moon is fast, but rather that the Moon is so close to the Earth while Hale Bopp was far away.
It's a nice APOD. At one o'clock you can see a bright orange star, "sitting" on some red nebulosity. That star is the Garnet Star, Mu Cephei, and the red nebulosity is IC 1396. You can see a very large (4.5MB!) picture of IC 1396 and Mu Cephei
here.
Ann
Ah, dear old Hale Bopp!
Here in Sweden most people think that Hale-Bopp is a cellphone. But I remember the comet well. You could see it for months, or at least it felt like that. As I kept looking at the comet, I realized not only how slowly the comet seemed to move, but also how quickly the Moon moved across the Earth's sky. The difference, of course, was not that Hale Bopp was slow and the Moon is fast, but rather that the Moon is so close to the Earth while Hale Bopp was far away.
It's a nice APOD. At one o'clock you can see a bright orange star, "sitting" on some red nebulosity. That star is the Garnet Star, Mu Cephei, and the red nebulosity is IC 1396. You can see a very large (4.5MB!) picture of IC 1396 and Mu Cephei [url=http://www.koenvangorp.be/photos/2010_09_08-ic1396_3504.jpg]here[/url].
Ann