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Bright Comet’s Tail Dazzles in Images from ESA/NASA SOHO Spacecraft

A comet brightens and its tail grows as it moves from right to left against a black background of stars. A black disk appears at the bottom with a white circle drawn on its center. Faint streamers of coronal material extend away from the disk. A time stamp appears in the bottom left corner. The comet's name and "ESA/NASA SOHO/LASCO C3" appears in the upper right.
In mid-January 2025, the ESA (European Space Agency) and NASA Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) watched comet C/2024 G3 (ATLAS) pass about 8 million miles from the Sun. In this image sequence, captured by SOHO’s Large Angle and Spectrometric Coronagraph (LASCO), the Sun is blocked by a disk (at the bottom), and the white circle shows the size and location of the Sun. The head of the comet became so bright, it overwhelmed LASCO’s sensor, creating artificial horizontal bands (known as “bleeding”) in the images.
NASA/ESA/SOHO/LASCO/K. Battams

From Jan. 11 to 15, 2025, a bright comet surged through images from the ESA (European Space Agency) and NASA SOHO (Solar and Heliospheric Observatory) spacecraft. Called C/2024 G3 (ATLAS), the comet made its closest pass to the Sun, or perihelion, on Jan. 13, soaring a mere 8 million miles (or 9% of the average Earth-Sun distance) from our star.

These views of comet ATLAS were captured by SOHO’s LASCO (Large Angle and Spectrometric Coronagraph) instrument, which uses a disk to cover the Sun’s surface and reveal fainter details in the solar atmosphere (or corona). Although this comet was first spotted in April 2024 by the NASA-funded Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System (ATLAS) survey, LASCO has helped discover more than 5,000 other comets as they flew past the Sun.

Karl Battams, LASCO’s principal investigator at the U.S. Naval Research Lab in Washington, D.C., processed some of the images to bring out fine details in the comet’s tail and create the sequence above. When bright comets like this one pass close to the Sun, their tails often react to fluctuations in the solar wind, a stream of particles and energy constantly flowing off the Sun. Heliophysicists can study the reaction of the tails to better understand the Sun’s effects on its neighborhood and on comets passing by.

While it was briefly visible in Northern Hemisphere skies just after sunset near perihelion, comet ATLAS is now slowly receding from the Sun and is best seen from the Southern Hemisphere, where the comet is moving into darker night skies. However, there are signs the comet might have broken up after its pass by the Sun, meaning it could fade rapidly over the coming days.

The SOHO mission is a cooperative effort between ESA and NASA. Mission control is based at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. LASCO was built by an international consortium led by the U.S. Naval Research Lab.

By Vanessa Thomas
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center