Hi Nick,

It is wonderful to see a truly bright comet comet again, even in bright twilight..  Prior to this I think it C/2013L3 at 2nd magnitude,  See attached picture.  I did see C/2006 P1 in the daytime and in the western sky after sunset - nothing like the show it put on in the Southern Hemisphere.  The daytime show was interesting and crossed an item off of my bucket list, but was only spectacular because I could actually see a comet in the daytime, next to the (blocked out) Sun.  So 20 F3 is a welcome sight.

My comparison to Kohoutek was not physical comparison - only the fact that the circumstances were similar.  20 F3 won't be seen well-placed in a truly dark sky until it has (probably) faded a lot.  The same was true of Kohoutek.  Kohoutek was 3rd magnitude when it finally was in a dark sky.  20 F3 may be the same.   There is a difference, of course.  There didn't seem to be many observations when Kohoutek was low or closer to the Sun.  Technology has helped in the imaging in that regard.

Both images are wonderful.  Michael is a magician, of course, when it comes to imaging comets.  But I bow down to both of you.  I tried to take a picture with the same set up as the one attached picture(different camera) and I think the background was just too bright.  [Admittedly, I haven't even looked at the images.]  I have no portable set up for imaging and probably wouldn't do it if I had such a setup - getting too old to haul around equipment..

Our weather looks good with the possible exception of Thursday morning.  

By the way, is there any way I can get a look at that webinar you guys put on a couple of weeks ago?  It looked very interesting. 

Charles







On Wednesday, July 8, 2020, 02:55:10 PM PDT, Nick James <ndj@nickdjames.com> wrote:


Charles,

Many thanks for your observation report. It is great to hear your visual
impressions of this comet given your long experience and very
interesting that you compare it with Kohoutek.

For those of us living north of 50 degrees latitude the comet has only
been seen against a very bright sky so far but it has been a wonderful
sight. The view on the morning of July 7 was just fabulous but the Sun
was not far below the horizon. My image taken around 01:40 UTC has a
very bright background so much of the faint tail detail was lost. It is
interesting to compare my image and Michael Jaeger's taken at almost the
same time:

https://britastro.org/cometobs/2020f3/2020f3_20200707_0126_ndj.html
https://britastro.org/cometobs/2020f3/2020f3_20200707_mjaeger.html

His image shows something like 4 degrees of tail, mine only 1.5 deg.

It has been raining here the last two days so I'm unlikely to get
another view until Saturday.

Nick.


On 08/07/2020 06:39, Charles S Morris - cometguy3783 at yahoo.com (via
baa-comet list) wrote:
>  Hi Folks,
> Here in Southern California, it has been clear the entire month and I have imaged 6-8 comets every night except that of July 4/5 (a US holiday) where there were too many fireworks, many illegal, going off and filling the air with smoke.  I often get high humidity in the morning, but most of these days have been dry.  And I am forecast to get good weather for the next several days.  I am sorry the weather has been problematic. I know the frustration of having weather interfere with observing,
> I have seen C/2020 F3 in bright twilight the last two mornings from my home.  My results-
> 2020 July 6.50 UT  m1=0.9:, DC-9, 3 deg. tail 10x50 B2020 July 7.50 UT  m1=1.3, DC=9, 3 deg. tail 10x50 B
> The 3 degree tail was confirmed independently by Dan Green Tuesday morning.  The brightness estimates were corrected for differential extinction.  I think the estimates are good to within a few tenths.  The drop in brightness was very real.   I will be able to get a PA on the tail for the July 7 observation
> Now, how bright was the sky background?  I was surprised to see the comet as it rose over the hills to the northeast on Monday morning.  Those hills are 7 degrees so the background was very bright.  My initial thought was, this thing has to be 0 magnitude.  But the numbers said otherwise.  The tail was obvious, but quite faint.  On Tuesday the tail went just up to and to the left of theta Aur (mag 2.6) which was 3 deg. above the comet.
> My original plan was to drive to a spot with a better horizon on Tuesday morning, but when I saw the comet on Monday morning, I changed my mind.  I hate driving at night these days and the trip is an hour roundtrip.  So, I plan to continue to observe in bright twilight.  The comet will move into a notch in the hills so my horizon will improve down to 4-5 degrees.  This way I will be able to continue my string of 29P observations (Nothing exciting so far).  Unfortunately, my NW horizon is 20 deg. so I will have to drive next week at some point.
> Several bright comets have been named in reference to C/2020 F3, but so far the correct one has not - Comet Kohoutek.  By the time Kohoutek got into a dark sky, it was 3rd magnitude.  That is what is going to happen here, I expect.  It will be a nice comet, but probably not spectacular.
> I am in my observatory imaging.  I have to babysit my scope, unfortunately.  All this clear weather is wonderful, but I am exhausted.  Good thing I am retired.
> Clear skies,
> Charles MorrisDreamweaver ObservatoryFillmore Ca, USA
>      On Tuesday, July 7, 2020, 03:47:00 PM PDT, Nick James <ndj@nickdjames.com> wrote:

>  Peter,
>
> That shows the bifurcated tail well.
>
> I've stacked 21x5s exposures from this morning and the resulting V-band
> synthesised image shows stars to around 9th mag at the same altitude as
> the comet (Gaia DR2). Comphot then gives a total magnitude of 2.0. The
> detected tail length is around 1.5 deg.
>
> Things should get better for us as the comet moves up into a darker sky.
>
> Nick.
>
>
>>
>> I stacked 14 of yesterday’s desaturated images and it shows well the bifurcated
>> tail near the comet’s head.
>>
>
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