"I have just gone over my comet computations again, and it is humiliating to perceive how very little more I know than I did seven years ago when I first did this kind of work." -Maria Mitchell

Well, it's getting close to the end of October, the Moon is waning towards its new phase, and -- at least in the northern hemisphere -- the days are getting shorter and the nights are lengthening. Is there anything unique on its way that's worth watching the skies for? In today's Ask Ethan column, our suggestion comes from longtime reader and commenter Sinisa Lazarek, who inquires:

Since ISON comet is soon going to show up, maybe an article on that could be cool. What can we expect, what would be the best days for observation etc. Since my understanding is that it's gonna be really bright and big, maybe host a little photo contest or just for fun.

Hope you like the suggestion and keep up the excellent blog! We all love it!

You might have heard of this referred to as a potential "Comet of the Century," so let's start off with the comet of last century that many of you will remember: Hale-Bopp!

Image credit: Tom Hoffelder, of Comet Hale-Bopp, of course!

Hale-Bopp is a very large, periodic comet that came through the Solar System in 2215 B.C., when a very close encounter (a near collision, in fact) with Jupiter changed its orbit dramatically, as close gravitational encounters often do. With a nucleus around 30-60 km in diameter, it's much larger than most known comets; the famed Halley's Comet has a nucleus of only around 10 km for comparison.

And an important combination of factors: that Hale-Bopp is large, that it's thought to be a very young comet (making possibly only its second pass through the inner Solar System in the 1990s), and that it emitted a lot of (reflective) material as it passed near the Sun made for a spectacular show in the 20th Century.

Visible to the naked-eye for 18 consecutive months and outshining all but the brightest single star in the sky (Sirius), Hale-Bopp is believed to be the most viewed comet in all of human history. In the images above, you can see the blue (ion) tail and the white (dust) tail, something common to practically all comets.

But not all comets that pass through the inner solar system put on a show like Hale-Bopp did; back in the 1970s a potential "Comet of the Century," known as Comet Kohoutek, disappointed skywatchers across the globe.

Image credit: Lunar & Planetary Labs / U. of Arizona / NASA - Johnson Space Center.

Sure, it was visible to the naked eye, and yes, it became quite bright. It was not quite as large as Hale-Bopp, but it was also thought to be a very young comet (in terms of having made a very small number of passes through the inner Solar System), and it would also pass very close to the Sun (passing well inside the orbit of Mercury), something that Hale-Bopp did not do.

Passing close to the Sun is a mixed bag, mind you, when it comes to comets.

The rather unremarkable Comet Lovejoy passed very, very close to the Sun, so close that it's a special type known as a sungrazing comet. This is a double-edged sword; when comets pass very close to the Sun they can be evaporated completely, they can become fragmented and muted, or they can -- as Lovejoy did a few years ago -- offgas spectacularly, and create a fantastic display. The tough part about sungrazers is that while they become objectively very bright, they also reach their peak brightness when they're very close to the Sun, meaning that you might not be able to see them even if they are spectacular!

There's something else worth remembering about comets that differentiates them from things like the Moon and the stars: even if they're very bright, they're also extended objects, which means that brightness is spread out over a large area. And this matters.

On the left is the Big Dipper; on the right is the Andromeda galaxy. The middle star in the dipper -- Megrez -- connects the handle to the cup, and is the dimmest star of the seven. The Andromeda galaxy has the same brightness as Megrez, yet while you can easily see Megrez from within many heavily light-polluted cities, Andromeda is much more elusive, because its brightness is extended over a large area.

So it goes with a comet as well. Even if a comet reaches the same brightness as the full Moon, it won't be quite as dominant in the sky as the full Moon, as its brightness will be extended over a much larger area. Which brings us to Comet ISON.

Image credit: NASA, ESA, J.-Y. Li (Planetary Science Institute), and the Hubble Comet ISON Imaging Science Team.

ISON was discovered by an international project that uses 30 telescopes across the globe to monitor the sky searching for comets: the International Scientific Optical Network. (That's why it's named comet ISON.) This was comet ISON as imaged by Hubble in April, when it was the same distance from the Sun as the planet Jupiter. As you can see, there was not yet a "dust tail" but only the blue ion tail, which is all that very distant comets get. The ultraviolet radiation from the Sun is enough to ionize carbon monoxide (and the CO+ ion produces that blue glow), but it isn't until the comet gets closer to the Sun that a significant dust tail appears.

But over the past year, the comet has gotten much, much closer, and we've been able to follow its path through the sky.

Image credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center / Axel Mellinger.

By this point -- October -- it's a lot closer to the Sun, and there's a dust tail (in white) to go along with the characteristic ion tail. Hubble took a second look at it, and discovered something very interesting, at least from my point of view.

Image credit: NASA, ESA, and the Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA).

Its nucleus is completely intact! It's very difficult to gauge its size, but it's hard to believe based on what we've seen so far that we're looking at a Hale-Bopp-caliber comet. Astronomer Karl Battams has been very critical of the media circus calling this the "Comet of the Century," stating unequivocally:

Few serious astronomers and cometary scientists have ever felt ISON would be 'brighter than the full Moon'. ... That's entirely the media's term, and we've been saying this for months, that none of us in the [Comet ISON Observing Campaign] foresee ISON getting that bright, and never have done so.

You may have seen this lovely Adam Block picture of ISON, though, showing a green glow that Hubble missed.

Image credit: Adam Block / Mount Lemmon SkyCenter / University of Arizona.

This extended, green coma is due to carbon-carbon and carbon-nitrogen molecules being released as the outer layers of the comet sublimate. But the still-intact nucleus makes this a potentially very interesting comet, because it could brighten tremendously when it reaches perihelion, or the closest approach to the Sun.

And believe it or not, perihelion is coming up really soon, and the comet is going to be really close to the Sun!

Image credit: compiled October 16, 2013 by Matthew Knight, via http://www.isoncampaign.org/

On November 28th, the comet will pass within just a single solar diameter of the Sun's photosphere. It could break up, it could remain intact. It could offgas a tremendous amount, it could be entirely vaporized. It's certain that it will brighten tremendously, but it isn't certain whether that means it will put on a show for skywatchers.

But if it survives its close encounter with the Sun and brightens as expected, it should be around as exciting as Comet Lovejoy was, with a reasonable possibility to match Comet McNaught, the comet-of-the-21st-century-so-far.

What will happen after perihelion?

Will it produce a spectacular show for all earthly observers? Will it leave a trail of Earth-crossing dust and create a new meteor shower: the ISONids?

Image credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / W. Reach (SSC/Caltech).

Assuming it survives, it will get closer-and-closer to Earth once it passes perihelion until the day after Christmas, where it reaches its nearest point to our planet. And if you want to know where to look in the sky for it, Astronomy Magazine has created an extremely helpful chart.

Image credit: Astronomy: Richard Talcott and Roen Kelly.

You can track comet ISON in real-time, and if you want to take photos, sure, you could send them to me, but you'd be a lot smarter to send them to the National Science Foundation, where your photo could win you thousands of dollars!

Unfortunately, that's what we know to the best of our abilities so far about comet ISON. I'd like to be able to tell you more (as would many others), but the truth is we don't know enough about ISON's nucleus, origins or structure to predict more than I've told you.

Regardless of how you feel about our uncertainties, it has a chance to be a spectacular show for skygazers, so I hope you'll follow its progress! And if you have a question or suggestion for me, drop me a line!