Electronic Telegram No. 2960 Central Bureau for Astronomical Telegrams INTERNATIONAL ASTRONOMICAL UNION CBAT Director: Daniel W. E. Green; Hoffman Lab 209; Harvard University; 20 Oxford St.; Cambridge, MA 02138; U.S.A. e-mail: cbatiau@eps.harvard.edu (alternate cbat@iau.org) URL http://www.cbat.eps.harvard.edu/index.html Prepared using the Tamkin Foundation Computer Network COMET C/2011 UF305 (LINEAR) An apparently asteroidal object discovered by the LINEAR survey (discovery observations tabulated below) that was posted on the Minor Planet Center's NEOCP webpage (as CA68092) was inadvertently announced on MPEC 2011-V16 with a minor-planet designation and an e-assumed orbit (P = 70 yr) despite a report by H. Sato (Tokyo, Japan) that the object showed a diffuse coma 20" in diameter (magnitude 17.6) on CCD images taken on Nov. 3.1 UT remotely with a 0.25-m f/3.4 reflector at the RAS Observatory near Mayhill, NM, U.S.A. J. V. Scotti (Lunar and Planetary Laboratory, University of Arizona) writes that Spacewatch images taken by T. Bressi on Nov. 2.07 show a faint coma of diameter 7" with a 0'.14 tail in p.a. 98 degrees in a moderately crowded star field; co-added images taken by Bressi on Nov. 3.09 show a 10" coma and a 0'.15 tail in p.a. 99 degrees. Scotti's own images taken on Nov. 28.1 with the Spacewatch 1.8-m f/2.7 reflector show the comet as very slightly diffuse. Luca Buzzi (Varese, Italy) notes that his images taken on Nov. 12.8 with a 0.60-m f/4.6 Newtonian reflector show a coma around 7" x 5" in size, possibly elongated in the east-west direction. Fifty stacked 60-s images taken by R. Holmes (Ashmore, IL, USA; 0.61-m f/4 astrograph; measured by L. Buzzi, H. Devore, S. Foglia, and T. Vorobjov) on Dec. 1.0 show an 8" coma with a faint tail 15" long in p.a. 120 deg. 2011 UT R.A. (2000) Decl. Mag. Observer Oct. 31.07777 18 18 07.11 +14 57 04.1 18.1 LINEAR 31.08995 18 18 07.39 +14 57 03.9 19.3 " 31.10239 18 18 07.58 +14 57 03.9 18.4 " 31.11472 18 18 07.79 +14 57 03.6 18.9 " 31.12690 18 18 08.01 +14 57 03.1 18.6 " The following hyperbolic orbital elements by G. V. Williams are from 94 observations, 2011 July 25-Dec. 16 (mean residual 0".4). An ephemeris appears on MPEC 2011-Y51. Epoch = 2012 July 12.0 TT T = 2012 July 22.15150 TT Peri. = 121.99323 e = 1.0007164 Node = 297.43546 2000.0 q = 2.1381146 AU Incl. = 93.96008 NOTE: These 'Central Bureau Electronic Telegrams' are sometimes superseded by text appearing later in the printed IAU Circulars. (C) Copyright 2011 CBAT 2011 December 29 (CBET 2960) Daniel W. E. Green