See Comet C/2015 ER61 PanSTARRS at its Best

[caption id="attachment_135467" align="alignnone" width="580"]

Comet C/2015 ER61 PanSTARRS shortly after outburst on April 8th. Image credit and copyright:

John Purvis

.[/caption]

Have you been following the springtime parade of bright comets? Thus far, the Oort cloud has offered up several fine binocular comets, including

Comet 2/P Encke

,

41/P Tuttle-Giacobini-Kresak

,

45/P Honda-Mrkos-Pajdusakova

,

C/2016 U1 NEOWISE

and

C/2017 E4 Lovejoy

. Now, another comet joins the dawn ranks, as it brightens up ahead of expectations: 2015 ER61 PanSTARRS.

Discovered on March 15

th

, 2015 by the prolific

PanSTARRS-1

NEO survey atop Haleakal

a

in Maui, Hawaii, Comet ER61 PanSTARRS made our who's-who list of bright comets to watch for in 2017. The odd "ER61" designation stems from the early identification of the object as an asteroid, before it presented observers with a cometary appearance.

[caption id="attachment_135476" align="alignnone" width="580"]

The path of Comet C/2015 ER61 PanSTARRS through the sky from early May through mid-August. Credit: Starry Night Education software.[/caption]

Late northern hemisphere Spring through Summer sees the comet maintaining a decent elevation above the eastern horizon at dawn, gliding north and parallel to the ecliptic plane through the constellations Pisces, Aries and Taurus from May through mid-August. The comet passed 1.08 AU from the Earth last month on April 4

th

, and is now racing away from us. The comet's location near the March equinoctial point on the celestial hemisphere assures an equally good apparition for both the northern and southern hemisphere. As seen from latitude 30 degrees north, the comet sits 30 degrees above the eastern horizon, through the remainder of May. Venus also makes a brilliant beacon to track down Comet ER61 PanSTARRS, as the planet heads towards

greatest elongation

46 degrees west of the Sun on June 3rd.

[caption id="attachment_135477" align="alignnone" width="580"]

The orbit of Comet ER61 PanSTARRS through the inner solar system. Credit: NASA/JPL.[/caption]

The comet is also on a 7,591 year long orbit inbound, which takes it out nearly 2,500 AU from the Sun. That's 190 times the Pluto-Sun distance, and the fourth most distant aphelion of any solar system object known. The 2015-2017 passage of the comet through the inner solar system actually shortened the orbit of Comet ER61 PanSTARRS down to an aphelion of 'only' 854 AU due to a 0.9 AU pass near Jupiter last year on March 28

th

, 2016. A similar orbital shortening by Jove occurred for

Comet Hale-Bopp in 1996

, which came in on an 4,200 year orbit and departed the inner solar system on a shorter 2,500 year path around the Sun.

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The projected light curve for Comet C/2015 ER51 PanSTARRS. The purple line denotes perihelion, and the black dots are actual observations. Adapted from Seiichii Yoshida's

*Weekly Information for Bright Comets*

.[/caption]

Prospects and Prognostications

Observers reported an outburst from the comet last month in the first week of April, causing it to jump about 2 magnitudes in brightness. Right now, it's holding steady at +7th magnitude. Unfortunately, the Moon reaches Full phase this week on May 10th, though you've still got a slim window to hunt for the comet after Moonset and before sunrise. Once the Moon moves towards a slender crescent phase next late week, we'll once again have dark predawn skies ideal for comet hunting.

Here are some key dates for Comet C/2015 ER61 PanSTARRS as it glides through the dawn sky:

(Stars highlighted are brighter than +5

th

magnitude, and passes are less than a degree unless otherwise noted.)

May 10

th

Reaches perihelion at 1.04 astronomical units (AU) from the Sun.

May 12

th

Passes near the +4.9 magnitude star 19X Piscium.

May 20-23

rd

Passes less than 10 degrees from Venus.

May 21

st

The waning crescent Moon passes less than 10 degrees to the south.

June 10

th

Passes near the +3.6 magnitude star Eta Piscium.

June 11

th

Passes near the galaxy M74.

June 16

th

Passes into the constellation Aries.

June 19

th

The waning crescent Moon passes 9 degrees to the south.

July 13

th

Passes near (less than 5') the +4.6 magnitude star Epsilon Arietis.

July 18

th

The waning crescent Moon passes 9 degrees to the south.

July 23

rd

Passes near the +4.8 star Zeta Arietis.

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The comet versus Venus in the dawn sky - looking eastward on May 15th. Credit: Stellarium.[/caption]

August 2

nd

Crosses into the constellation Taurus.

August 15

th

The waning crescent Moon passes 8 degrees to the south.

August 16

th

Passes near M45 (The Pleiades)

After mid-August, Comet 2015 ER61 PanSTARRS will drop back down below +10

th

magnitude, not to return for several millennia to come.

Observing a comet like ER61 PanSTARRS is as simple as knowing where and when to look, then starting to slowly sweep the suspect area with binoculars for a little fuzzball looking like a globular cluster stubbornly refusing to snap into focus. In pre-telescopic times, ER61 PanSTARRS would've entered and exited the inner solar system unrecorded.

[caption id="attachment_135468" align="alignnone" width="580"]

Comet C/2015 ER61 PanSTARRS from April 12th. Image credit and copyright:

Joseph Brimacombe

.[/caption]

Next up: We've got one more predicted comet on tap for 2017, as C/2015 V2 Johnson brightens up to +7th magnitude in mid-June. Keep watching the skies, as the next great comet of the century could always appear unannounced at any time.