NASA’s Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory, or STEREO-A spacecraft,
captured these images of comet ATLAS as it swooped by the Sun from May 25 –
June 1. During the observations and outside STEREO’s field of view, ESA/NASA’s
Solar Orbiter spacecraft crossed one of the comet’s two tails.
In the animated image, ATLAS emerges from the top of the frame and
approaches the Sun — off camera to left — against gusts of solar wind. Its dust
tail, which reflects sunlight, appears white. Mercury is also visible as a bright
dot emerging from the left against the stationary starfield. The vertical
streaks in the image are artifacts created by saturation from bright background
stars.
While STEREO recorded this footage, Solar Orbiter crossed one of comet
ATLAS’s tails. Launched in February 2020, the spacecraft wasn’t scheduled to
enter full science operations until June 15, but engineers adjusted Solar
Orbiter’s testing schedule and turned on its four
most relevant instruments for the encounter. It’s the first
time a comet tail crossing by a spacecraft not designed to chase them was
predicted in advance.
As material sheds from a comet’s nucleus, it leaves behind two tails: a
thin ion tail, made of charged particles, and a more diffuse dust tail that
reflects visible light. The ion tail always points away from the Sun regardless
of the comet’s trajectory; the dust tail more closely follows the comet’s path.
Solar Orbiter crossed the ion tail on May 31, some 27 million miles downstream
and outside STEREO’s field of view. The team is still awaiting those results.
It will fly through the remnants of the dust tail on June 6.
Comet ATLAS was discovered on Dec. 28, 2019 in images captured by the
Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System, or ATLAS robotic astronomical
survey system in Hawaii. Comets are traditionally named after the instruments
or person that discovered them. The comet follows an orbit that takes it past the
Sun approximately every 6,000 years, though observations suggest the comet is
currently disintegrating and is unlikely to return. It likely originated in the
Oort cloud, a spherical cloud of ice and rocks surrounding our solar system.
The Oort cloud begins about 185 billion miles away, some 67 times farther than
Neptune.
Banner Image: Comet ATLAS swoops by the Sun. Credit: NASA/NRL/STEREO/Karl
Battams
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