As Comet ISON nears the end of its several-million-year journey toward the sun, NASA and the European Space Agency’s Solar and Heliospheric Observatory has provided a view of its approach. The observatory and other telescopes will watch closely as the comet rounds the sun on Thanksgiving Day.
Scientists are eager to know whether the comet will survive or disintegrate; predictions of both fates have flown around over recent months. Astronomers believe ISON holds clues about the solar system’s distant past because it formed around the same time as the sun and planets (SN: 11/16/13, p.14).
Science News will post an update about ISON’s fate later this week.
On Thanksgiving Day, Comet ISON will make its closest pass by the sun. Scientists will watch to see whether the comet stays intact or disintegrates. The video shows 17 hours of the comet’s journey, starting on November 26, and captures a coronal mass ejection.