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Credit & Copyright: Anglo-Australian Observatory
Explanation:
The colors of
Comet Hyakutake are caused by the action of sunlight on
the dust and gas produced by the warming nucleus.
The microscopic dust particles
reflect sunlight while
the sun's ultraviolet radiation excites and ionizes
the gas molecules causing them
to glow or fluoresce in a range of visible colors.
This enhanced color picture
reveals subtle
color changes across the cometary coma and a faint multicolored tail.
It was made on the night of March 18-19 by combining separate
green, red, and blue photographs, each about a 15 minute exposure.
Some of the color features in the tail
may well represent real changes in its structure from one exposure
to the next.
The colored star trails,
created as the
Anglo-Australian Observatory's
UK Schmidt Telescope tracked the rapidly moving comet,
indicate the order of the separate exposures.
The cometary hues revealed here can not be seen directly due to
the human eye's lack of
color vision at the low light levels involved.
Latest Comet Hyakutake images:
JPL,
Fayetteville
Observer-Times,
NASA's Night of
the Comet,
ICSTARS,
Crni Vrh Obs.,
Cent. Mich U.
January February March April May June July August September October November December |
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NASA Web Site Statements, Warnings, and Disclaimers
NASA Official: Jay Norris. Specific rights apply.
A service of: LHEA at NASA / GSFC
& Michigan Tech. U.
Based on Astronomy Picture
Of the Day
Publications with keywords: comet Hyakutake
Publications with words: comet Hyakutake
See also: