Long-period comets are planetesimal remnants constraining the environment and
volatiles of the protoplanetary disc. We report the discovery of hyperbolic
long-period comet C/2022 E3 (ZTF), which has a perihelion ∼1.11 au, an
eccentricity ≳1 and an inclination ∼109∘, from images
taken with the Palomar 48-inch telescope during morning twilight on 2022 Mar 2.
Additionally, we report the characterization of C/2022 E3 (ZTF) from
observations taken with the Palomar 200-inch, the Palomar 60-inch, and the NASA
Infrared Telescope Facility in early 2023 February to 2023 March when the comet
passed within ∼0.28 au of the Earth and reached a visible magnitude of
∼5. We measure g-r = 0.70±0.01, r-i = 0.20±0.01, i-z =
0.06±0.01, z-J = 0.90±0.01, J-H = 0.38±0.01 and H-K = 0.15±0.01
colours for the comet from observations. We measure the A(0∘)fρ
(0.8~μm) in a 6500~km radius from the nucleus of 1483±40~cm, and CN,
C3, and C2 production of 5.43±0.11×1025~mol/s,
2.01±0.04×1024, and 3.08±0.5×1025~mol/s, similar to
other long period comets. We additionally observe the appearance of jet-like
structures at a scale of ∼4,000 km in wide-field g-band images, which may
be caused by the presence of CN gas in the near-nucleus coma.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS:L, 9 pages, 6 figures, 2 table