Many thanks Peter - I'd say that's well worth doing.
You do have to sit on the object for quite a time to build up the signal over the noise.
 
The Moon is now interfering with observations of the faint coma but I managed to get a fairly definitive image as per the attached just before the Moon got too close. Now that we have this, it will be interesting to measure what happened to the very inner coma to see whether any fallback can be detected following earlier stacked images of 29P by Martin, Nick and others.
 
BTW: Since that picture was taken, 29P has had another outburst that has taken its magnitude from 15.3R to 14.3R !!!
 
There is a MISSION 29P webpage on the Comet Section website now.
It's not quite the same as the original one as I am having to rebuild it following a problem with a server software update.
However you can see all the latest observations listed.
 
Richard
----- Original Message -----
From: Peter Tickner - peter.tickner1472 at btinternet.com (via baa-comet list)
To: baa-comet@simplelists.com
Sent: Thursday, November 26, 2020 3:52 PM
Subject: [BAA Comets] RE: 29P - part 2 from 25th Novemeber

And a stack of 70x60 seconds in colour with the comet added back in to the star field.  Both images taken with a ZWO ASI071MC Pro through my 14inch SCT with a luminance/IR cut filter.    I would have carried on a little longer but cloud moved in.

 

Peter

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