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Updated · USA TODAY · Jul 14Comet 10P/Tempel 2 Returns After 5.5 Years as July 14 New Moon Aids Viewing
3 articles · Updated · USA TODAY · Jul 14Summary
- July 14 offers the best chance to spot Comet 10P/Tempel 2, with the short-period comet visible about an hour after sunset.
- A new moon reduces sky brightness, making the comet's faint fuzzy glow and short, fan-shaped tail easier to detect.
- Binoculars or a telescope are required—the roughly 10-kilometer-wide comet is not visible to the naked eye.
- Capricornus is the key landmark: viewers in the United States should look south from dark, cloud-free locations away from city light pollution.
- Tempel 2, first identified in 1873, swings back through the inner solar system about every 5½ years, giving stargazers only brief viewing windows.
Insights
Why was July 14 optimal viewing if the comet gets brighter in August? Does Comet Tempel 2 share the same ancient chemical secrets as interstellar comets?