It wasn't but a week ago I was observing Comet Honda-Mrkos-Pajdusakova, which for simplicity we'll call Comet Honda-M-P. It was very low in the southern sky in the early morning hours and a tough catch in the constellation Pisces Austrinus the Southern Fish. Using the "lure" of time, I made two observations - one around midnight and the other at 2 a.m. This way I was able to track and positively identify a faint, round hazy glow that slowly inched across the starfield over the span of two hours. Terry's photo below captures its appearance well.

Image
© Terry LovejoyComet Honda-Mrkos-Pajdusakova photographed by Australian amateur astronomer Terry Lovejoy on August 5.
Sure wasn't much to look at, but finding an old friend is always a pleasure. I last saw the comet back in 2001 and before that in 1995. Honda-M-P is what astronomers call a returning or periodic comet, similar to Halley's Comet but with a much smaller orbit and hence a shorter times between returns. It was discovered by Japanese amateur astronomer Minoru Honda in 1948 and seen at nearly the same time by astronomers Antonin Mrkos and Ludmila Pajdusakova.

Honda belongs to the short-period Jupiter family of comets or those with orbits less than 20 years under the control of the gravitational powerhouse Jupiter. As it orbits the sun with a period of 5.3 years, it occasionally makes close passes to the planets Venus, Earth and Jupiter. When near Jupiter, the planet's powerful gravity can alter the comet's orbit and change its period slightly. This last occurred in 1983 and will again in 2030.

Image
© Chris Marriott's SkyMapComet Honda-M-P covers a lot of ground in the next week, plunging through the southern constellations Grus, Tucana, Hydrus and Dorado as seen from Australia.
Next Monday August 15, Honda will pass very close to the Earth - relatively speaking - at a distance of just 5.6 million miles. To put this in perspective, that's 23 times farther than the moon or still a long ways off. I've been asked if the comet will affect the Earth in any way, and the answer is 'no'. Honda is only 0.6 miles across and far too tiny to produce any measurable effects on our much more massive planet. If anything, it's the other way around. Earth may very slightly alter the comet's orbit.

When I saw the Comet Honda-M-P, it was very faint in a large amateur telescope (15-inch). Today it's brighter at magnitude 8.5 with a coma or cometary atmosphere measuring about half the size of the full moon.

If you're worried that Earth might pass through the coma, don't be. At Honda's present distance of 9.3 million miles, the hazy glow around the tiny cometary nucleus is about 43,000 miles across, much too small to reach out and brush our planet. Even if we did pass through a comet's outer coma, its effects would likely amount to a nice show of meteors at best. Comas are highly rarefied - any ice, dust or small rocks would quickly vaporize on striking the upper atmosphere.

The closer a celestial object is to Earth, the faster it appears to move across the sky. Because the comet is closing in on minimum distance from Earth, it's quickly picking up speed, covering more and more ground as we approach the 15th. Tonight for instance, it travels some two degrees or four times the full moon's diameter in the southern constellation of Grus the Crane. Tomorrow that increases to three degrees, and by the 14-15th, Honda-M-P flys across some 10 degrees of sky- your clenched fist held at arm's length - in just one night!

The next night or two, the comet will still be visible from the far southern states low in the south around 1 a.m., but by the 14th, only southern hemisphere observers will see it. To spot the comet, you'll need at least a small telescope, since it's very diffuse and will get no brighter than 8th magnitude. The moon will also be near or at full phase, lighting up the sky and making it even harder to find.

Image
© Chris Marriott's SkyMapTwo side-by-side binocular comets at dawn in Leo on October 7.
After closest approach, Honda-M-P swings back north and slowly continues to brighten, reaching 6th magnitude (naked eye limit) in late September, and finally appearing in the morning sky before dawn for northern hemisphere sky watchers in early October. It's expected to be an easy binocular comet then, shining around 7th magnitude.

On the morning of the Oct. 7, it will be joined by Comet Elenin four degrees (eight full moons) to its north. Although both comets will be at different distances from Earth - 90 million miles for Honda-M-P and 22 million for Elenin - they'll lie in approximately the same line of sight. With wide-field binoculars you'll be able to catch them both in the same field of view. What a wonderful and rare sight this will be!

Speaking of Comet Elenin, southern observers continue to observe and photograph it. It's now magnitude 9 with a 3-4 arc minute coma and visible in 4-inch and larger telescopes. Click HERE for the latest views of the comet with the STEREO-B (behind) solar telescope.