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Delmarva Skywatchers: Comet Lemmon to Illuminate The Skies Northwest After Sunset

If you’re looking for a celestial treat in the coming nights, keep your eyes on the northwest sky just after sunset — Comet C/2025 A6 (Lemmon) is making its way into evening visibility, and Delmarva is in a prime spot to catch it.

Discovered in January 2025 by the Mount Lemmon Survey, Comet Lemmon has become one of the most talked-about comets of the year. Originally expected to remain faint, the comet has surprised astronomers by brightening faster than forecast.

Lemmon will make its closest approach to Earth on October 21, 2025, at about 0.596 AU (roughly 89 million km) away. It reaches perihelion (its closest point to the Sun) on November 8, 2025.

Currently, the comet is estimated to be around magnitude 5 to 6, making it not quite prominent to the naked eye in most skies — but definitely within reach of binoculars or small telescopes in a dark location. Some predictions are more optimistic, suggesting it might brighten to magnitude ~4 around late October, which would make it more noticeable even to unaided eyes under favorable conditions.

One of the exciting features now is that Lemmon will be about 42° away from the Sun during its closest approach — meaning it should be visible low in the western sky about an hour after sunset. The star Arcturus (in the constellation Boötes) and the double star Izar are being cited as useful reference points to help find it.

By mid-to-late October, it should shift from being a dawn object into the evening sky, which greatly improves viewing opportunities for observers who aren’t night-owls.

Photo: Chuck Ayoub

What Delmarva Observers Need to Know

When & Where to Look

Sky Conditions


Tips for Viewing & Photographing Comet Lemmon

For Visual Observers (Binoculars / Telescopes)

For Astrophotographers

Caution / Tips


Why This Is a Special Opportunity

Comet Lemmon is not a frequently returning visitor — its inbound orbital period is estimated at about 1,350 years, and after its perihelion passage that period may shorten to around 1,150 years. It last visited Earth’s vicinity more than a millennium ago, and this may be our best chance to glimpse it in our lifetime.

If conditions hold, Lemmon could become the brightest comet of 2025 — a rare and beautiful sight in the autumn sky.

So, clear your evening calendar (or at least a half hour), pack your binoculars or camera gear, and look northwest after sunset over Delmarva. With luck and clear skies, you may witness a stunning visitor from the outer reaches of the solar system.

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