Comet 17P/Holmes

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Original
Reason
It is one remarkable comet, really once in a life time opportunity and you do not need a telescope to see it. It is not as spectacular as Comet McNaught was, yet it is really, really unique.
Proposed caption
17P/Holmes is a periodic comet in the Solar System, discovered by the British amateur astronomer Edwin Holmes on November 6, 1892. In only 42 hours in October 2007, the comet brightened from a magnitude of about 17 to about 2.8. This represents a change of brightness by a factor of about a half million times, and is the largest known outburst by a comet. Few days ago this comet was bigger than the Sun! The image shows the ion tail of the comet. Now the comet has lost her tail and you could see it no more. The nomited image was published on APOD
Articles this image appears in
17P/Holmes
Creator
Ivan Eder
  • IMO the nominated image is the best image I've seen (and I've seen many). I was not able to get a higher resolution of this image, but of course you're welcome to try. After all even, if the image will get FP status, it always could be de-listed, if a better one would became available later on. Thank you.--Mbz1 (talk) 03:24, 26 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • I'm afraid the tail of the comet is gone and the brightness is diminishing. She still could go to other outburst and obtain an other tail. After all it is not the first known outburst of this comet. It happend 115 years ago and btw also in November. It is how otherwise a very dim comet was seen and discovered--Mbz1 (talk) 02:13, 26 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, Sagittarian Milky Way. You are absolutely right about the Moon light. I did take the image of the comet today with the full Moon present, but it became increasingly difficult even to find the comet and to see where to point my camera to. Even, if the Moon light would be out of the way, a similar photo cannot be taken because the tail of the comet is there no more even with a very, very dark sky and with a very good telescope. Thank you.--Mbz1 (talk) 13:32, 26 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Too bad. This photo was taken earlier than I thought. Given the diameter, it's surface brightness should still be above that of a dark sky. Must be the dust cloud hogging all of the brightness.. Sagittarian Milky Way (talk) 12:20, 27 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • It's a useful/valuable picture no doubt, but I was more addressing FP concerns. That is, the the head of the comet almost appears stationary, is so perfectly round, and so evenly shaded (it almost looks like an .svg), when in fact comets are large, dirty, chunks of melting ice/dust hurtling through space at great speeds. Because of this, the picture appears unrealistic (I have never seen a picture of a comet, or any space image for that matter, look like this image, although my experience in this area is admittedly narrow). The point being, I guess, that this picture does not seem true-to-life to me, which undermines its essential EV (enc. value). If you or someone else can prove to me otherwise, then I'll gladly modify my vote. --Malachirality (talk) 03:10, 27 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]
    • Ummm... I don't think anything can be proved, but the center is white for being completely overexposed, and even the overexposed center is still merely a diffuse sphere of dust. The comet itself is smaller than a single pixel, so it's all dust we're seeing. Tom Ruen (talk) 03:17, 27 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • What's EV? The picture is looking down the comet's foreshortened tail at only 14 degrees, weird stuff can happen at that angle. Like an elephant's view of it's nose. How do you know it's stationary? This is not a movie. What you see is so big (100x Earth), it could be going 13 miles a second and still take a whole day to move it's size. The icechunk itself is 0.001 pixels wide. It's symmetrical basically because this is an explosion, all of this came out of one event, — before October 23rd, there was nothing there, (maybe the tiniest 3 pixel ghost). In space, an explosion never ends. You haven't seen anything like this because this hasn't really happened before (not to this degree). Anyway, if you look closely you can see it's not completely round.
Minor note: the comet moved about 5 (wikipedia resolution) pixels upwards against the stars during the time it took the picture to be taken. Sagittarian Milky Way (talk) 12:20, 27 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment So I guess I kind of didn't really know what I was talking about/looking at earlier, but even though that that's been cleared, the original concerns still remain. Namely, this image is misleading (and thus not enc.) because it does not actually depict the comet (I thought for the longest time that the white "ball" in front was the comet head). Moreover, the most important part of the picture, the explosion, is overexposed and contains no detail; b/c of this, it's difficult and confusing to discern what the giant white mass actually is. It's obviously an interesting shot (once I actually figured out what it was) and the difficulty reflects the prowess of the photographer no doubt, but it fails on several FP criteria IMO. --Malachirality (talk) 16:38, 27 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]
This is not overprocessed, just really long exposure. This isn't even a short+long composite. If your eyeballs were hugely sensitive telescopes the size of rooms or dinner tables you'd see this too. Sagittarian Milky Way (talk) 12:20, 27 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Comment IMO one of the prove that the image is real is that it was selected out of hundreds of images to be published at APOD. Two guys, who select the images for APOD are great specialists in astro photography. The other prove could be found by looking at the other pictures of the comet at Spaceweather.com site, for example. In any case the main idea behind nominating the image was to evoke interest to this amazing comet (and in this my goal I have succeeded (IMO)). Thank you all very much for the interest to the subject and for your votes and comments.--Mbz1 (talk) 14:26, 27 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]

  • The mention of dirty snowball reminded me one funny story from few years ago. I've asked my supervisor, if he's seen the comet, which was visible at that time. He responded: "What is there to see, just a fuzzy ball". Then I wrote the poem. Here it is:

She really looks as fuzzy ball,
But one can use imagination,
She's faint and she is rather small,
Yet she bears magical sensation.
Like bride would fly to handsome groom
She flies to Sun in time and space,
She's very old, yet she's in bloom,
Her tail as train filled up with grace.
She dreams their first, their wedding night,
Her ring is asteroid belt,
And yes, she's ready to excite,
If even it would mean to melt.
Sorry for the poem and for my English. I just could not resist this "dirty snowball".--Mbz1 (talk) 17:39, 27 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]

No consensus MER-C 02:46, 28 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]