[![enter image description here](https://i.sstatic.net/KSBxs.gif)](https://i.sstatic.net/KSBxs.gif)

This GIF is made (via giphy.com) from the new NAASA Goddard video [Hubble's New Image of Interstellar Object](https://youtu.be/JG9x6tkf8mg). It shows the comet moving at quite a clip!

This shouldn't be a surprise.

From the link in the question https://archive.stsci.edu/proposal_search.php?mission=hst&id=16009 the coordinates for the first and last exposure are:

        RA             Dec            Time
    09 47 45.181   +18 07 30.70	   2019-10-12  13:44:39
    09 48 17.077   +17 59 20.37    2019-10-12  20:42:23

**In 7 hours the comet moved roughly 0.2 degrees!**

From JPL's Horizons, the state vectors for the comet and Earth around the middle of the image sequence are:

          JDTDB        Calendar Date (TDB)        X     (km)      Y               Z               VX   (km/s)     VY              VZ
    comet 2458769.250, 2019-Oct-12 18:00:00, -1.9092457E+08,  2.9804744E+08,  3.2507629E+07, -1.3003446E+01, -2.9440986E+01, -2.7477326E+01
    Earth 2458769.250, 2019-Oct-12 18:00:00,  1.4082817E+08,  4.9358841E+07, -1.4600024E+03, -1.0121471E+01,  2.8065445E+01, -7.7695706E-04

The comet is about 416 million km from Earth, moving at roughly 64 km/s relative to Earth and 42 km/s relative to the solar system barycenter.