BRIXIIS Astronomical Observatory

Copyright © All rights reserved. Made By Erik Bryssinck  Terms of use  |  Privacy policy

Archive Modification B&W Quickcam  Modification Vesta Webcam  Buildingproject Genesis camera  Synta EQ6 equatorial mount
Contact Form

Observation date

image

Photometry

(FOCAS)

Afρ

astrometry

Observatory

20200914

X

X


X

B96 - BRIXIIS

















































Comet P/2020 P2  = P/2009 Q4 (BOATTINI)

Photometric data obtained from FOCAS-II software


COD B96

OBS BRIXIIS Observatory

CATALOG: Gaia DR2 - BAND: G


                                   10x10  20x20  30x30  40x40  50x50  60x60   SNR   SB   COD

COMET         UTC                    +/-    +/-    +/-    +/-    +/-    +/-     N  FWHM  CAT

------------  -------------------  -----  -----  -----  -----  -----  -----  ----  ----  ---

P/2009 Q4     14/09/2020 00:44:04  17.31  16.82  16.63  16.34  16.29          5.6  17.0  B96

P/2009 Q4     14/09/2020 00:44:04*  0.11   0.20   0.13   0.11   0.03            2   3.3  Gai



                                                                     AFRHO         LOG

COMET         UTC                   DELTA    r    BOX "   MAG   RSR    CM    +/-  AFRHO  OBS

------------  -------------------   -----  -----  -----  -----  ---  -----  ----  -----  ---

P/2009 Q4     14/09/2020 00:44:04    0.96   1.73  28.86  16.61    6      6     1  0.775  B96




FoCAs 3.66

www.astrosurf.com/cometas-obs

es.groups.yahoo.com/group/Cometas_Obs

Af(rho) data according the CARA-approach is available via request to CARA-coordinator


http://cara.uai.it


N. Erasmus, South African Astronomical Observatory, reported his discovery of a comet on CCD images taken with a 0.5-m f/2 Schmidt reflector at Mauna Loa, Hawaii, in the in the course of the "Asteroid Terrestrial-Impact Last Alert System" (ATLAS) search program , the object noted as having a diffuse coma (FWHM size being 6" in 4" seeing) extended about 15" toward p.a. 260 degrees.

The object was immediately posted on the Minor Planet Center's page.  H. Sato, Tokyo, Japan, noted that this appears to be a recovery of P/2009 Q4 (cf. IAUCs 9069, 9081) when he sent his follow-up observations composed of twenty stacked 60-s exposures taken remotely on Aug. 12.43 UT with a 0.43-m f/6.8 astrograph located near Mayhill, NM, USA.  Sato found that the comet was strongly condensed with a coma 10" in diameter, and there was a 15" tail toward p.a. 270 degrees; the magnitude was 19.3 as measured within a circular aperture of radius 5".7.