Comet Leonard Captured in Stunning Photos by Backyard Photographer

As Comet Leonard whizzed by Earth during Christmas festivities on its journey through the Solar System, photographer Andrew McCarthy went out into his backyard and captured incredible photos of the colorful "Christmas Comet."

A Close-Up Photo of Comet Leonard Through a Telescope

McCarthy went outside in on the night of December 26th and managed to photograph the comet for about 12 minutes despite it being low in the southwestern sky (as seen from Florence, Arizona).

"[The brief window gave] me a great look at the incredible structure and color around the nucleus," McCarthy writes. "I couldn’t quite see it with the naked eye, but through binoculars I could see it pretty clearly. You can actually capture it with just a cell phone if you know where to look!"

McCarthy used a modified SCT telescope and captured 25 separate 30-second exposures. He then stacked the 25 frames together to create this single zoomed-in photo of Comet Leonard:

"Processing comet images is a challenge because even in the span of 12 minutes, the comet drifts across the frame relative to the background stars," McCarthy tells PetaPixel. "Due to the comet's motion, it has to be stacked differently. I tell the software to stack the images based on the comet position and star positions separately, which is then combined together to produce an image with the comet and stars both sharp."

Photographer Andrew McCarthy's backyard setup for photographing Comet Leonard. McCarthy's telescope pointed at Comet Leonard.

The fact that the comet was so low on the horizon from McCarthy's vantage point also presented challenges due to light pollution and Earth's atmosphere.

"In addition to stacking the images, it had to have software remove harsh background transients caused by thin clouds and light pollution," McCarthy says. "There was also an orange cast to everything due to Rayleigh scattering, so the image had to be precisely color balanced to resolve the tail as anything beyond an orange smear.

"Once the background gradients were removed and the image was color balanced, by 'stretching' the histogram (brightening the image) I could bright out the faint irregular structure in the tail, distorted by a recent disconnection event."

A Wider Photo of Comet Leonard Shot with a DSLR

In addition to a close-up look of Leonard, McCarthy also photographed the comet with a Canon 6D DSLR and a 135mm lens.

It was not a single exposure, though -- stacking was still used to capture a clear, detailed view of the comet.

The photo "also contains about 12 minutes worth of images, broken up by about 70 x 10” exposures," McCarthy says. "To freeze the clouds in place despite the shots occurring over a 12 minute period, everything was stacked against a single reference frame. This allowed me to add the context of the clouds for the scene while being able to incorporate enough data to the image to bring out the faint outer tail of the comet during processing without introducing more noise.

"Since this was so low on the horizon, despite having about 45 minutes between the end of blue hour and the object setting, I only had about 12 minutes of usable shots due to the thin clouds on the horizon, visible in the video as orange streaks."

A Video of Comet Leonard as Seen from Earth

Finally, McCarthy also took his 25 calibrated photos and created this video of Comet Leonard "moving 150,000mph through space."

In case you were curious how much Leonard moved during the 12 minutes I shot it the other night. This is reversed, the comet is actually moving into the tail. The orange streaks are clouds. #astrophotography #space #opteam pic.twitter.com/9jhGR8Lpml

-- Andrew McCarthy (@AJamesMcCarthy) December 29, 2021

The orange streaks seen in the frame are clouds that were in the sky that night.

Backyard Information on Comet Leonard

Comet Leonard, officially named C/2021 A1, was discovered on January 3rd, 2021, by University of Arizona astronomer G. J. Leonard from the Mount Lemmon Observatory northeast of Tucson, Arizona. It was the first comet discovered in 2021, and it was spotted when it was about 466 million miles (750m km) from the Sun.

Here's an animation showing the comet's path through our solar system:

Animation by Phoenix7777 based on data from HORIZONS System, JPL, NASA. Image licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0.

Comet Leonard will be making its closest approach to the Sun on January 3rd, 2022. It has been within Neptune's orbit since 2009, but once it swings around the Sun, the comet will be ejected from the Solar System, never to return again.

You can find more of McCarthy's astrophotography on his website and Instagram. You can also support his work by becoming a patron through Patreon.

#educational #spotlight #andrewmccarthy #astrophotography #backyard #comet #cometleonard #telescope

Photographer shoots breathtaking image of comet Leonard from his backyard

Comet Leonard has been a real treat for astrophotographers this month. And one of them, Andrew McCarthy, took a magnificent photo of it. I saw it while scrolling through Facebook and it stopped me in my tracks. So, I reached out to Andrew wanting to know more, and he kindly shared the photo and some […]

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Joan Anton Català Amigó@estelsiplanetes

Impressionant la dimensió de la cua del cometa C/2021 A1 Leonard!
Jan Hattenbach@JanHattenbach
#CometLeonard's twisted tail is more than 36° long! Mosaic picture Dec. 26, 20:25 UTC from #LaPalma, 2300m asl. 50mm, f/4, ISO 3200, 180s each. C/2021 A1 t.co/SM4vrfnmkw

How I Photographed Comet Leonard Over Madrid

Last week saw the last few days to see and photograph Comet Leonard after sunset at the horizon where I am located in Spain, and when my fellow photographer Javier Martinez Moran asked me to join him in an attempt to catch the comet passing behind the iconic Four Towers of Madrid, I couldn’t say no!

Javier did the planning with the PhotoPills and Planit Pro apps. He found the precise spot outside the city, getting as far as possible from the Four Towers (Área de Negocios de Cuatro Torres, Spanish for "Four Towers Business Area"), that would allow us to use a long lens to get that nice compression and to enhance the comet size against the skyscrapers.

Planning the photo with apps.

The weather was definitely on our side that day. We got an almost clear sky after sunset, and to make it even more spectacular, the high clouds showed up just before sunset to give us a beautiful and colorful sunset! It was definitely a nice "cherry on top" for the shoot.

A wonderful sunset with silhouettes of the Four Towers of Madrid.

To shoot the comet, I used a Sony a7R III with the Sigma 100-400 f/5-6.3. Having shot Comet NEOWISE last year, I knew more or less what settings to use, but this time the challenge was to get a good exposure of the city lights and the comet during a timelapse.

The final settings for the timelapse were a shutter speed of 1s, f/6.3, ISO 5000, and an interval of 2 seconds. I think the final result looks pretty epic. Even though the comet was not visible to the naked eye, you can clearly see it in the photo and timelapse (seen at the end of the video at the top of this article), and I am so happy that I was able to shoot it.

Comet Leonard above the Four Towers of Madrid. The comet can be seen as the point of light above the leftmost tower. A crop of the photo showing the location of Comet Leonard in the frame.

You can watch my vlog above to see a behind-the-scenes look at the shoot and subscribe to my YouTube channel to follow along with my work.

P.S. Javier also made a behind-the-scenes vlog of the shoot that's in Spanish.

About the author : Mattia Bicchi is a professional timelapse and hyperlapse photographer from Italy, based in London, and living in Madrid. You can find more of Bicchi's work on his YouTube, Instagram, and Twitter.

#inspiration #spotlight #walkthroughs #behindthescenes #cityscape #comet #cometleonard #howitwasshot #madrid #makingof #mattiabicchi #night #nightsky #spain #timelapse #vlog

Catch this once in a lifetime opportunity to photograph comet Leonard

If you live in the Northern hemisphere tonight may be your one and only chance to see and photograph Comet Leonard, in your entire lifetime. Comet C/2021 A1, also known commonly as Comet Leonard after the man who discovered it, will be visible on December 12th 2021. Although it will be visible with the naked […]

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