Comet Lemmon: Early Morning Capture of a Fast-Moving Visitor
October 10, 2025 – I set my alarm at 5:00 AM – right when, according to the ephemerides, the comet C/2025 A6 (Lemmon) would finally clear the roof of my house.
The telescope was already polar aligned and ready to go. I loaded the comet’s orbital parameters into Stellarium a while ago, so I easily transferred them to NINA, and the imaging session began shortly after.
I captured a total of about 43 minutes of data: 50 exposures of 30 seconds and 18 exposures of 60 seconds, before the sky brightened with sunrise.
The comet was surprisingly easy to spot through the scope – even with just 10-second exposures! At this rate, I wouldn’t be surprised if it becomes visible to the naked eye once it reaches its minimum distance from Earth in a few days, when it will also shift to the evening sky.
Images were stacked in DeepSkyStacker (DSS) and processed in PixInsight.
Notice the greenish nucleus and white dust tail!
I also made a short animation showing the comet’s motion over just 18 minutes: it’s incredible how quickly it moves across the sky! … And as a bonus, you can even spot a meteor streaking through one of the frames!