
These travelling masses of ice and dust galloping throughout the universe are believed to have shaped the course of life on this planet. As a
result of comet-hunting, many deep-sky objects including nebulae and galaxies have been discovered with perhaps the most obvious collection
being the 109 (or 110) DSO's attributed to Charles Messier. With over 1000 comets now having been catalogued and approximately 200 having been
established as being periodic, historical records suggest comets to have been observed and documented as far back as 240 BC (Comet Halley by
the Chinese).
Comets are appealing to amateurs for a variety of reasons - they lead to incredible photographs thanks to their glowing and colourful tails
extending millions of kilometers as they approach the sun and the ice and various frozen gases in the nucleus begin to vaporize; they are the
precursors of meteor showers as remnants left behind on prior visits are encountered by our planet while we orbit the sun; and they represent
an active adventure and form the basis of a "culture" (comet hunters) based on the discovery of new comets during the early dawn hours on the
eastern horizon or just after sunset on the western horizon.
Note: For two excellent articles on comets, see Astronomy Magazine (Dec/2009, pg: 50-53; Oct/2011, pg: 30-35).