This image by Wayne Tilcock first appeared Sunday (July 12) in The Davis Enterprise, where Tilcock formerly worked as a photographer for 20 years. He’s been with ٺƵ since last year, working as a photographer at ٺƵ Health. He took this image of Comet NEOWISE on his own time, allowed his former paper to use it — and now he’s letting us run it in Dateline, too.
He captured the image at 4:30 a.m. last Friday (July 10), from a grassy area between Schaal Aquatic Center and ٺƵ Health Stadium, using his Nikon Z7 with a 200-400mm lens at 400mm, on a tripod, exposure time 8 seconds.
He shot northeast through trees and past the water tower that stands between the Dairy Barn and Dairy Road Field. There was no one around except Tilcock, save for a few people working at the Dairy Barn across La Rue Road.
Tilcock also saw the comet early Thursday, driving north from Davis with his wife, Miranda, who works at the ٺƵ Center for Watershed Sciences, and their children, Abby and Scout.
“My 9-year-old, Abby, spotted it out the car window just as we passed the golf course on Pole Line Road,” Wayne said. “I was about the same age when Halley’s Comet came by in the ’80s and my mom took me out to see it. NEOWISE is putting on a much better show and it was great to get to share a similar moment with my kids.”
See it for yourself
Comet NEOWISE has been visible to the naked eye in early mornings in the northeast sky and is , in the northwest sky, for observers at northerly latitudes, according to EarthSky.
You can learn more from NASA experts during a broadcast of NASA Science Live starting at noon PDT Wednesday (July 15), on and the agency’s , along with , , , , and .
Viewers can submit questions on Twitter using the hashtag #AskNASA or by leaving comments in the chat section of Facebook, Periscope or YouTube.
Media Resources
Dateline Staff, 530-752-6556, dateline@ucdavis.edu