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Credit & Copyright: Rolando Ligustri
(CARA Project,
CAST)
Explanation:
Still racing
across planet Earth's night skies,
Comet Iwamoto (C/2018 Y1) shares this pretty telescopic
field of view with stars and nebulae of northern constellation
Auriga, the Charioteer.
Captured on
February 27, Iwamoto's greenish coma and faint tail
appear between a complex of reddish emission nebulae and open
star cluster M36 (bottom right).
The reddish emission is light from hydrogen gas ionized by
ultraviolet radiation from hot stars near
the region's giant molecular cloud some 6,000 light-years
distant.
The greenish glow from the
comet, less
than 5 light-minutes away, is predominantly emission from
diatomic carbon molecules fluorescing in sunlight.
M36, one of
Auriga's more familiar star clusters,
is also a background object far beyond the Solar System,
about 4,000 light-years away.
Comet Iwamoto passed closest to Earth on February 12 and is outward
bound in a highly elliptical orbit that will carry it beyond
the Kuiper belt.
With an estimated orbital period of 1,317 years
it
should return to the inner Solar System in 3390 AD.
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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
Publications with words: comet
See also:
- APOD: 2025 February 5 Á Comet G3 ATLAS Setting over a Chilean Hill
- APOD: 2025 February 2 Á Comet G3 ATLAS Disintegrates
- APOD: 2025 January 28 Á Comet G3 ATLAS over Uruguay
- APOD: 2025 January 26 Á The Many Tails of Comet G3 ATLAS
- Comet G3 ATLAS: a Tail and a Telescope
- APOD: 2025 January 21 Á Comet ATLAS over Brasilia
- APOD: 2025 January 20 Á Comet ATLAS Rounds the Sun