Comet C/2009 E1 (Itagaki)
Abstract
H. Yamaoka, Kyushu University, reports the discovery of a comet with coma diameter about 70" on CCD images taken by Koichi Itagaki (Yamagata, Japan) with a 21-cm f/3 reflector (diameter of field 2.2 deg) located at Takanezawa, Tochigi, Japan, using software by H. Kaneda (Sapporo, Japan) to detect moving objects automatically. The original times for the two discovery images (as well as the first four follow-up images taken at the same location with a 30-cm f/7.8 reflector) were later corrected and relayed by S. Nakano (Sumoto, Japan) and are tabulated below; they were measured by Kaneda. Nakano adds that the comet is diffuse with weak condensation and a hint of tail toward the south, measuring total mag 11.9 from an image taken on Mar. 14.424 UT. 2009 UT R.A. (2000) Decl. Mag. Observer Mar. 14.41509 2 48 07.10 + 8 23 31.0 12.8 Itagaki 14.41522 2 48 06.88 + 8 23 33.3 12.8 " 14.42556 2 48 05.43 + 8 24 19.4 " 14.42872 2 48 05.06 + 8 24 34.2 " 14.43199 2 48 04.57 + 8 24 47.3 " 14.44446 2 48 02.82 + 8 25 45.6 " Available CCD astrometry, including that sent to the Central Bureau after posting on the Minor Planet Center's NEOCP webpage, was published on CBET 1721, with most of the astrometrists reporting on the object's cometary appearance: R. Holmes (Charleston, IL, USA, 0.61-m f/4.5 astrograph; measurer H. Devore; Mar. 15.0) reports that ten co-added exposures reveal a nuclear condensation 28" in diameter and a diffuse coma 54".8 in diameter with no tail. E. Guido, G. Sostero, and P. Camilleri (observing remotely with a 0.25-m f/3.4 reflector near Mayhill, NM, USA; Mar. 15.12) write that thirty co-added 30-s unfiltered exposures show a bright inner coma with diameter of about 1'.4, and a faint external halo nearly 4' in diameter (total mag about 11.0). J. E. McGaha (Tucson, AZ, USA, 0.36-m f/10 reflector, Mar. 15.4) relates that fifteen stacked 30-s images show a 42"-diameter bright coma with a fan-shaped tail spanning 60 deg (90" long at p.a. 70 deg, the center of the fan); red magnitudes from single 30-s exposures within specific photometric apertures: 30", 14.1; 60", 13.1; 90", 12.2; 180", 11.3. K. Kadota (Ageo, Saitama-ken, Japan, 0.25-m f/5 reflector; Mar. 15.41) reports a bright coma of diameter 3'.8 and total mag 10.8, with strong central condensation and no tail.
- Publication:
-
International Astronomical Union Circular
- Pub Date:
- March 2009
- Bibcode:
- 2009IAUC.9026....1Y