Monday, September 22, 2025

Comet C/2025 A6 (Lemmon) with Earth Satellite Trails: View from Austria

Comet C/2025 A6 (Lemmon) with Earth Satellite Trails: View from Austria

Astrophotographer Georg Klingersberger: "Comet A6 Lemmon is a very active wonderful comet, which, as you can see in the image, is overlaid by many satellite lines within 20 minutes. The image is a stack of 12 images, each exposed for 2 minutes, through a Takahashi FSQ 106 telescope, at aperture F/3.6, an a field of view, FOV. 3°x2°. A Canon EOS RP(crop) served as camera, at ISO 1600, in the period from 02:28h-02:56h UT . . . shortly before a marvellous Moonrise."

Comet Lemmon is not just another icy rock—it is a time-traveler returning to the inner solar system after roughly 1,350 years.

It was discovered on January 3, 2025, by a sky-survey team and was initially mistaken for an asteroid at a dim magnitude of +21.5; later imagery showed a tiny coma and faint tail, prompting its reclassification as a comet, with pre-discovery images traced back to November 2024. This initial misclassification highlights how subtle these objects can be when far away—and how surprise discoveries can change our understanding of a celestial object’s journey. Stretching as far as 240 astronomical units (AU) out and now spiraling inward, Lemmon’s orbital period—now estimated between 1,150 and 1,350 years—is gradually shortening due to gravitational shifts. It is a reminder that the cosmos is dynamic—and this rare return makes Comet Lemmon a once-in-a-lifetime spectacle for nearly all of us.

Orbital calculations show the comet will pass closest to Earth around October 21, 2025, at roughly 0.60 AU (about 89 million km). It will reach perihelion (its nearest point to the Sun) on November 8, 2025, at about 0.53 AU.

This alignment—in which Lemmon is both near Earth and still illuminated by the Sun—creates a prime observational window. Its brightness and proximity are at a sweet spot during late October, offering a golden hunting ground for skywatchers.


Image Credit: Georg Klingersberger
Text Credits: Georg Klingersberger, Nasaspacenews[dot]com
Capture Location: Kobernaußen, Upper Austria
Image Date: Sept. 20, 2025

#NASA #Astronomy #Space #Science #Comets #CometC2025A6Lemmon #Coma #CometaryTails #SolarSystem #MilkyWayGalaxy #Cosmos #Universe #Astrophotography #GeorgKlingersberger #Austria #Astrophotographers  #UnitedStates #STEM #Education

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