Another recently discovered comet should be visible from Wyoming in the early morning darkness, and itâll be easier to see every night for the next month.
Comet 2025 F2 (SWAN)Â was discovered by two comet hunters, Vladimir Bezugly from Ukraine and Michael Mattiazzo from Australia, on March 29. Itâs already bright enough to spot with binoculars and could get brighter still.Â
All eyes will be on this comet once it reaches its perihelion, its closest approach to the sun, on May 1. That could be the best night to see this comet soaring through the night sky, but itâs worth a look in the meantime.
âThe last reported magnitude of the comet was 7.5 and improving,â said Max Gilbraith, planetarium coordinator at the University of Wyoming. âIt's dimmer than the naked eye can detect, but it might get bright enough to see with the naked eye in the next week.â
Another âDirty Snowballâ
Comets are basically âdirty snowballsâ primarily made of dust and âvolatile icesâ of water, carbon dioxide and ammonia.Â
They can be easily spotted by their tails, created as the cometâs volatile ices are vaporized by the energy of the sun, a process called outgassing, which creates a field of gas and debris that can stretch over 18 million miles long.
According to Gilbraith, C/2025 F2 (SWAN) is passing through the constellation Pegasus. That means it canât be seen in the Northern Hemisphere but will be visible soon.
âItâs making its way through Pegasus toward Andromeda,â he said. âThereâs a chance that observers could see it in the early dawn's light, very low on the horizon in the eastern-northeastern sky just before sunrise for the next week or so.â
The comet's current magnitude is 7.5, making it slightly brighter than Neptune but dimmer than Ceres, a dwarf planet between Mars and Jupiter thatâs the faintest naked-eye object visible in Wyomingâs darkest skies.Â
Anyone who wants to see it in the next week will need a pair of binoculars or a low-powered telescope. It'll probably be easier to see the comet's tail than the comet itself.Â
âIt does have a significant tail, and those are best seen through binoculars or a nice telescope because you have a wide field of view,â Gilbraith said. âWe should be able to catch it in the early dawn sky for the next week or so.â

Sun Grazer
Comets are usually seen at their best when theyâre closest to the sun. Astronomers anticipate that C/2025 F2 (SWAN) will come within 31 million miles of the sun, which is just inside the orbit of the Mercury.
According to EarthSky, the comet could reach a magnitude between 4.5 and 5, making it just as bright as, if not slightly brighter than, Uranus â assuming it survives long enough to shine that brightly.
Gilbraith described C/2025 F2 (SWAN) as a âsun grazer.â Itâs hurtling through space at an angle that could lead to its destruction as it approaches the sun.
âIt'll go around the sun at an extreme angle thatâs rather close for a ball of ice,â he said. âWeâll have to see if it survives all that intact because it could alter its orbit as it starts outgassing, and it could become much dimmer if it loses most of its material as it goes around the sun.â
Gilbraith said our view of C/2025 F2 (SWAN) will be determined by how fast the comet can escape the sun's intensity. We wonât know what will happen or what weâll see until we see it on May 1.
âIf it stays intact, it could get pretty bright and brilliant in the evening sky,â he said. âWeâll just have a narrow window before the comet gets too dim while the sunâs still out or there's still some sky glow. The closer an object looks in angle to the sun, the harder itâll be to find in the evening sky.â
Dedication And Patience
Astronomers have learned a lot about C/2025 F2 (SWAN) in the two weeks since its discovery. For amateur astronomers, thereâs still a lot of uncertainty about what they should expect to see between now and May 1.
Gilbraith said âthe dedicatedâ should be able to spot the comet in the eastern-northeastern sky just before dawn. Thatâs assuming theyâre willing to get up early enough to find a good dark sky to see it and are awake enough to use binoculars or a telescope to find it.
âIt might get bright enough to see with the naked eye in the next week,â he said. âItâll be too close to the Sun for the next couple of weeks after that, so we'll be watching into May to see if it survives its graze with the sun.â
Cameras can often catch details our eyes canât. Gilbraith recommends that anyone who canât spot the comet with their naked eyes, binoculars, or a telescope could still get a good view of it with their smartphone.
âMy favorite way to get a comet is to take a night picture,â he said. âPoint your camera or smartphone on that part of the night sky with a five to eight-second exposure. That should be just enough to really pop the tail on a comet.â
After that, itâll just be a question of waiting and watching what happens as C/2025 F2 (SWAN) grazes past the sun next month. Then, Gilbraith said weâll know whether there will be something to see or nothing to see.
âSometimes it's just about being patient and waiting for it to come around,â he said.
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Andrew Rossi can be reached at arossi@cowboystatedaily.com.