SOHO's view of comet Kudo-Fujikawa.
Click on image for full size
Image courtesy NASA
SOHO watches comet
News story originally written on January 31, 2003
On January 29, 2003 a comet passed very close to the Sun. The comet was too
close to the Sun to be viewed from Earth; the bright light from the Sun blocked our view of the comet. However, the SOHO
spacecraft, which observes the Sun continuously from an orbit 1.5 million kilometers from Earth, was able to
capture images of the comet's close pass by the Sun. SOHO has an instrument called a coronagraph,
which blocks out the brightest light from the Sun, allowing it a good view of the comet's closest approach.
Comet Kudo-Fujikawa (also called C/2002 X5) passed within 28.4 million kilometers (17.7 million miles) of the Sun. That was well inside the
orbit of Mercury, the closest planet to the Sun. Mercury orbits at a distance of about 58 million kilometers from the Sun.
Several images from SOHO were combined to create this animation
(820K GIF) of the comet passing the Sun; and this high resolution animation (3.7M GIF). These are large files, and may take a long
time to download!
You might also be interested in:
It was another exciting and frustrating year for the space science program. It seemed that every step forward led to one backwards. Either way, NASA led the way to a great century of discovery. Unfortunately,
...moreThe Space Shuttle Discovery lifted off from Kennedy Space Center at 2:19 p.m. EST, October 29th. The sky was clear and the weather was great as Discovery took 8 1/2 minutes to reach orbit for the Unitied
...more A moon was discovered orbiting the asteroid, Eugenia. This is only the second time in history that a satellite has been seen circling an asteroid. A special mirror allowed scientists to find the moon
...more Will Russia ever put the service module for the International Space Station in space? NASA officials are demanding an answer from the Russian government. The necessary service module is currently waiting
...moreDuring a period of about two days in early May, 1998, the ACE spacecraft was immersed in plasma associated with a coronal mass ejection (CME). The SWICS instrument on ACE, which determines unambiguously
...moreJ.S. Maini of the Canadian Forest Service has referred to forests as the "heart and lungs of the world." Forests reduce soil erosion, maintain water quality, contribute to atmospheric humidity and cloud
...moreIn late April through mid-May 2002, all five naked-eye planets are visible simultaneously in the night sky! This is includes Mercury which is generally very hard to see because of its proximity to the
...more