At discovery on March 12, by R. H. McNaught), the comet was faint as 16.4 magnitude . It has steadily been brightening. Now it is below 11th magnitude in the constellation Capricorn. It is predicted to reach to 10 magnitude from January to March. In the Southern Hemisphere, it is observable only until December. In the Northern Hemisphere, the altitude will be getting lower slowly after January, and it will be too low to observe in April.
Date(TT) R.A. (2000) Dec. Delta r Elong. m1 Nov 01 19 57.61 -28 17.3 2.153 2.164 77.4 10.5 Nov 06 20 04.50 -27 16.4 2.165 2.120 74.1 10.4 Nov 11 20 11.94 -26 13.1 2.176 2.075 70.9 10.4 Nov 16 20 19.89 -25 07.0 2.186 2.032 67.9 10.3 Nov 21 20 28.33 -23 58.0 2.195 1.990 65.0 10.2 Nov 26 20 37.21 -22 45.7 2.203 1.948 62.2 10.1 Nov 26 20 37.21 -22 45.7 2.203 1.948 62.2 10.1 Dec 01 20 46.52 -21 30.0 2.209 1.908 59.5 10.0 Dec 06 20 56.24 -20 10.7 2.214 1.869 57.0 9.9 Dec 11 21 06.32 -18 47.5 2.217 1.831 54.5 9.9 Dec 16 21 16.75 -17 20.2 2.220 1.795 52.2 9.8 Dec 21 21 27.51 -15 48.9 2.222 1.760 50.1 9.7 Dec 26 21 38.59 -14 13.4 2.223 1.727 48.0 9.6 Dec 31 21 49.97 -12 33.7 2.223 1.696 46.1 9.5
Orbital Elements
Epoch 2006 March 6.0 TT = JDT 2453800.5 T 2006 Feb. 23.4750 TT MPC q 1.519607 (2000.0) P Q z -0.000084 Peri. 39.9676 +0.8785562 -0.4736622 +/-0.000007 Node 347.8476 +0.3283218 +0.6924048 e 1.000127 Incl. 16.9883 +0.3469060 +0.5442607 From 220 observations 2005 Mar. 12-Aug. 19, mean residual 0".4.