More info about this comet may be found here:
http://www.aerith.net/comet/weekly/current.html
http://www.aerith.net/comet/catalog/2013R1/2013R1.html
The light-curve in the webpage above shows that it is brightening very quickly.
Based on its current brightness, it seems that Comet R1 Lovejoy may reach around mag 5.5 at its brightest, which is quite decent. Hopefully it will continue to exceed expectations, who knows.
Closest approach to the Earth would be on around 20 Nov 2013 (about 2 weeks from now) at about 0.39AU: around that time the comet would be at its apparent brightest. Perihelion (closest approach to the Sun) would be on 22 Dec 2013 at 0.81AU.
Below is an image of the comet taken from my home in central Singapore this morning.
Date/time: Mon 04 Nov 2013 4:11am local time / 03 Nov 2013 2011 UTC.
Meade LX-90 8" SCT (f/10), Canon EOS 60D ISO1600 25s.
The comet was then in the constellation Cancer the Crab, at about 50 deg above the horizon in the ENE.
I also managed to view the comet in the eyepiece of the telescope with a 14mm XW eyepiece for 143x. It was a very faint barely discernable small fuzzy patch, yet I could tell that it was there for sure. Sky transparency was so-so.
Click here for much better images taken from darker sites:
http://spaceweathergallery.com/index.php?title=lovejoy
As can be seen from some of those images, the comet has developed a faint thin tail.
Keep monitoring this comet!
