Catch Comet 21/P Giacobini-Zinner at Its Best

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[caption id="attachment_139788" align="alignnone" width="435"]

Comet 21/P Giacobini-Zinner from August 14th. Image credit and copyright:

Rolando Ligustri

.[/caption]

A periodic comet may put on a fine show for northern hemisphere viewers over the next few months.

Comet 21/P Giacobini-Zinner is currently a fine binocular comet,

shining at +8thmagnitude

as it cruises across the constellation Cassiopeia. This places it above the horizon for the entire night for observers north of the equator in August, transiting the local meridian at dawn. And unlike most comets that get lost in the Sun's glare (like the current situation with

C/2017 S3 PanSTARRS

), we'll be able to track Comet 21/P Giacobini-Zinner right through perihelion on September 10

th

.

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The orbit of comet 21P, showing the comet's position at closest approach. Credit:

NASA-JPL

.[/caption]

This is because the comet is on a short period, 6.6 year orbit around the Sun that takes it from an aphelion of 6 Astronomical Units (AU) exterior to Jupiter's orbit, to a perihelion of 1.038 AU, just 3.3 million miles (5.2 million kilometers) exterior to Earth's orbit. The 2018 apparition sees the comet pass 0.392 AU (36.5 million miles/58.3 million kilometers) from the Earth on September 11

th

.

This is the closest passage of the comet near Earth since September 14th, 1946, and won't be topped until the perihelion passage of September 18

th

, 2058. Its next cycle of passes to Earth closer than 0.1 AU aren't until next century in the years 2119 and 2195, respectively.

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Comet 21/P from August 10th. Image credit and copyright:

John Purvis

.[/caption]

Discovered by astronomer Michel Giacobini at the

Côte d'Azur Observatory

in Nice, France on the night of December 20

th

, 1900 as it was crossing the constellation Aquarius, the 21

st

periodic comet was recovered two orbits later by Ernest Zinner on October 23

rd

, 1913 as it passed a series of variable stars near Beta Scuti.

Though the comet generally tops out at +8

th

magnitude, it has been known to undergo

periodic outbursts near perihelion

, bringing it up about 3 magnitudes (about 16 times) in brightness. This occurred most notably in 1946.

[caption id="attachment_139785" align="alignnone" width="580"]

The light curve for Comet 21/P. The black dots represent actual observations and magnitude observations. Credit:

Seiichi Yoshida's

Weekly Information on Bright Comets

.[/caption]

Comet 21/P Giacobini-Zinner is also the source of the Draconid (sometimes referred to as the Giacobinid) meteors, radiating from the constellation Draco the Dragon on and around October 7

th

and 8

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. Feeble on most years, this shower can produce surprises, such as occurred in 1998, 2005 and most recently in 2011, when a Draconid outburst topped a zenithal hourly rate of 400 meteors per hour, flirting with 'meteor storm' status. And while we're not expecting a meteor storm to accompany the

2018 perihelion passage

of Comet 21/P Giacobini-Zinner, you just never know... it's always worth keeping an eye out on early October mornings for the "Tears of the Dragon," just in case. Note that the

Moon reaches New phase

on October 9

th

, just a few days after the meteor shower's expected annual peak, a fine time to watch for any unheralded Draconid outbursts.

Prospects for Comet 21P

The comet is visible from the northern hemisphere through the remainder of August and all through September as it glides across Auriga, Taurus and Gemini and visits several well known celestial sights. In fact, it actually transits in front of several deep sky objects, including Messier 37 (Sept 10

th

), and Messier 35 (Sept 15

th

).

[caption id="attachment_139789" align="alignnone" width="580"]

Comet 21P passes in front of open cluster Messier 35 on September 15th. Credit: Starry Night.[/caption]

The comet will be moving at about two degrees per day when it's nearest to the Earth, on and around September 11

th

.

We begin to lose the comet, as it heads southward in late October. Still, the comet is over 50 degrees above the eastern horizon at dawn come October 1

st

as seen from latitude 30 degrees north, having maintained a similar elevation throughout most of September. Not bad at all.

Here are some upcoming dates with destiny for Comet 21/P Giacobini-Zinner:

August 19: Crosses into the constellation Camelopardalis.

August 29: Crosses into the constellation Perseus.

August 30

th

Crosses into the constellation Auriga.

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The celestial path of Comet 21P from August 16th through September 15th. Credit: Starry Night.[/caption]

September 2: Passes one degree from the bright star Capella.

Sept 7-8: Grouped 2 degrees from the open clusters M36 and M38.

Sept 10: Photo-Op: Skirts very near the open cluster M37. Also reaches perihelion on this date, at magnitude +7.

Sept 11: Passes closest to the Earth, at 0.392 AU distant.

Sept 13: Nicks the corner of the constellation Taurus.

Sept 14

th

Enters the constellation Gemini.

Sept 15

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Photo-Op: crosses in front of the open cluster M35.

Sept 16: Crosses the ecliptic southward and near the +3.3 magnitude star Propus (Eta Geminorum).

Sept 17: Crosses into Orion.

Sept 21: Crosses into Gemini.

Sept 23: Crosses into Monoceros.

Sept 24: Passes near the Christmas Tree Cluster, NGC 2264.

[caption id="attachment_139791" align="alignnone" width="580"]

The celestial path of Comet 21P from September 15th through October 15th. Image credit: Starry Night.[/caption]

Oct 1: Crosses the galactic plane and the celestial equator southward.

Oct 7: Crosses in front of the open cluster M50.

Oct 10: Crosses into Canis Major.

Oct 31

st

Passes near the bright star Aludra and may drop below +10

th

magnitude.

Binoculars are your best friend when you're looking for comets brighter than +10

th

magnitude. With a generous field of view, binoculars allow you to sweep a suspect area until the faint fuzzball of a comet snaps into view. I like to 'ambush' a comet as it passes near a bright star, and a good time to spot comet 21/P Giacobini-Zinner is coming right up on September 2

nd

when it passes less than one degree from the bright +0.1 magnitude star Capella.

Don't miss this year's fine apparition of Comet 21/P Giacobini-Zinner, coming to a night sky near you.

David Dickinson

David Dickinson

David Dickinson is a freelance science writer and long-time sky watcher. He has built telescopes and observatories, chased eclipses, and travels and observes with his wife, Myscha, on a mission to get ‘eyes on the sky’ worldwide. His books The Universe Today Ultimate Guide to Observing the Cosmos, The Astronomer’s Deep-Sky Field Guide and science fiction short stories are available here.