On October 31, 2025, my husband and I returned to Sargent, Texas for another opportunity to view and image Comet C/2025 A6 Lemmon.
I use an iPad to set up and watch the images from my telescope, and I was absolutely amazed to see the comet tail changing from frame to frame. When I processed the comet into a single image, the changes in the tail smeared out. So I made a movie.
This movie was made with 14 frames of data using 1 minute each of red, green, and blue data, so 42 minutes worth of data. The data was taken over about 45 minutes, so the faster sections of the movie are sped up by a factor of 970, and the slower sections of the movie are sped up by a factor of 388.
In the movie, you can see knots in the comet’s tail near the comet’s head moving towards the left away from the comet’s head, but you can also see the further-out tail moving up to consolidate. I think it’s absolutely amazing you can see so much change in the comet’s tail over this short a period of time.
Camera geek info – telescope:
- William Optics Zenith Star 73 III APO telescope
- William Optics Flat 73A
- ZWO 2” Electronic Filter Wheel
- Antila RGB filters
- ZWO ASI183MM-Pro-Mono camera
- William Optics Uniguide 32MM F/3.75
- ZWO ASI220MM-mini
- ZWO ASiair Plus
- iOptron CEM40
- Sargent, Texas Bortle 4 skies
Frames – telescope:
- October 31, 2025
- 14 60 second Gain 150 R lights
- 30 0.05 second Gain 150 R flats
- 14 60 second Gain 150 G lights
- 30 0.02 second Gain 150 G flats
- 14 60 second Gain 150 B lights
- 30 0.02 second Gain 150 B flats
- Matching darks and flat darks from library