Look Quick,the Green Comet Is Leaving The Neighborhood Fast
Comet? GREEN Comet? As in Josephine the Plumber's best buddy?
No! This comet!! 
©Prestige Brands Courtesy Wikipedia Commons
Of course, in the disambiguation, it's the startlingly green sky object, Comet C2007 N3, I am drawing your attention to. And it might be best if you look fast, because this comet is going the wrong way around the solar system and will zoom out of sight very soon. But don't worry if you miss the small smudge that is currently just visible in the sky, here is a huge and lovely picture of this greenest of all comets, called Lulin:
Photo courtesy of & copyright: Richard Richins (New Mexico State University)
Lulin has a huge number of interesting details going for it, in addition to its fast anti-planetary motion. It is giving off cyanogen and diatomic carbon (C2) which glow green in their excited states. It has a twisty tail, which actually detached at one point, probably due to a collision with a heavy burst of solar wind. And yes, it has a dust tail that points in both directions, a sort of an optical illusion in the case of this comet.
The long(ish) story (without nudity)
I think the story of the discovery of this comet will interest readers of this blog post more than just the pretty picture. It’s a human interest story at its best.
In 1996, at the age of only 7, backyard skygazer Quanzhi Ye saw a comet. Unfortunately, only days earlier, the same comet had been discovered by American amateurs Alan Hale and Thomas Bopp. They had each seen the same patchy spot on the sky and had reported it to the internationally recognized body that records such discoveries, the Central Bureau for Astronomical Telegrams.
Ye lost the right to name that comet, but he followed his dream to become a scientist. He was studying meteorology at China's Sun Yat-sen University, and spending spare time doing what he yearned to do most of all - discover a comet on his own. In July 2007, he was studying photographic plates taken several nights before at Lulin Observatory in Taiwan by astronomer Chi Sheng Lin.
At long last, 12 years after he "discovered" his first comet, Ye has cemented his place among the great astronomers by spotting this naked-eye object first. Officially named C2007 N3, it is now called Comet Lulin, after the observatory where the discovery plates were taken. This is probably its first trip around the Sun. Lulin comes from a part of the Solar System called the Oort Cloud, where bodies left over from the formation of the Solar System hang out until some passing object - another comet, a dark star - whatever - gravitationally knocks them out of their steady state and sends them plummeting toward the inner solar system.
Oops – I promised no more lectures! Let me add one more picture so you will know where to look for Lulin in the next few days:
Skymap courtesy Sky & Telescope
To Quanzhi Ye, I say congratulations for attaining your life's dream so young. Go get your degree in Astronomy! The world of meteorology is too restrictive for you. That's only one planet!
I had to modify this post after some comments were made on the original one. This new URL naming structure is a btch. Anyway, here are the comments that were made on that original message.
I often, well sometimes then, like to look out for the Leonids meteor showers, and allways wanted to go watch the aurora borealis.
Tell me pat, what's life on Mars really like? haha
Lulin/Ye, whatever it be,
tis green as the briny and old ancient sea,
a comet in space is a remarkable place,
think i'll write down the lyrics to post to unfree Chinee,
cos they'll need more encouragement than ever you will or me.
Oops was feeling lyrical haha
:}
It's just cold on Mars, and dusty. And reddish.



Salon.com
Comments
Malusinka, just get some good binoculars. A telescope has a bit of a learning curve. Sit in a sun lounger with cushions behind your head so you are comfortable. Some people suspend their binoculars from a bungee cord so they aren't supporting the weight. This makes for easier observing. Some binoculars (not enough of them) come with a camera tripod adapter. If yours do, that's another good way to go.
you know they are called "apparitions" which I think is strange
and wonderful. In '96 and '97 I was living where I had a really
good view of the stars, and when Hyakutake and then Hale Bopp
came through I was hooked on comets. Hyakutake was so
luminously bluishly beautiful as it streaked by and Hale Bopp!
That was something else, hanging out in the sky for such a long
time. Thank you a zillion times for this, I'll be looking with
my binoculars.
A question. That super bright planet I've been seeing for
months now, rises early, Southwest, is that Saturn?
Sheepdog - I specifically scaled down the picture with Jane Withers in it because I remembered her too!
Gary & Allie - Overcast has been my problem too, from my actual earthbound viewing station. Right now the Mars Orbiter is having a bit of a problem communicating with Earth; I had hoped there would be an attempt of a photo from one of the rovers of the comet, or another planetary outpost. Haven't seen any such thing yet.
{ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0jKJaGVlUKk }
Bluesurly, KindOfBlue and Ablonde - never give up - if not this comet, there is always the next. The solar system will never run out of dirty snowballs.
DakiniDancer - the brightest "star" in the west just now is Venus. It follows the sun as it sets. Venus is actually only a crescent shape right now, if you look at it in a scope or binocs; it is the relatively small distance between Earth and Venus that makes the planet look so bright. It will get brighter for the next couple of weeks, then will start to wane.
And I forgot good old Joe who first posted after my story went up. Thanks for reading so early this morning.
simply MUST defend my honor in these matters! ;)
WOOF
Meow!
Lulin is a hyperbolic comet, its orbit is a hyperbola. That means it may only ever make one trip through our solar system, or its orbit may be perturbed by planets, asteroids, etc., enough to become a periodic comet. That would mean future visits. Some astronomers will no doubt be watching the orbit as the comet recedes from Earth to see if the orbit changes. What we don't know is whether this is the first time Lulin ever visited our Sun, or for now at least, whether or when it may return. As of now, the math says the comet is a one-time only visitor.