Experts think the comet started breaking up last week, but it's still putting on a show for star gazers for a few more days.
However, Space.com emphasized that a daytime sighting could be dangerous. “Viewing the comet itself poses no harm, but staring at the sun — even briefly — can cause severe retinal damage ...
A bright comet could be visible in skies across the globe over the coming days for the first time in 160,000 years. Nasa said ...
G3 (ATLAS) is one of the few comets on record that became bright enough to be visible in the daytime without optical aid like ...
G3 (ATLAS) blazed past the Sun, captured in stunning detail by the SOHO spacecraft. Scientists used its passage to study how ...
The G3 Atlas comet has returned to our galaxy for a once-in-a-lifetime event and is now visible in the Southern Hemisphere.
Still, the comet is there, rounding the sun. Within a few days it’ll begin moving away from the sun, he said, adding that people in the southern hemisphere are going to have a better view of it.
Comet G3 ATLAS faced just such a perilous passage, reaching perihelion 14 million kilometers from the Sun on January 13th.
Following the Quadrantids meteor shower, another incredible sky event is about to take place: comet Atlas C/2024 G3 will soon ...
A newly-discovered comet might light up the night sky in the coming weeks, possibly shining even brighter than the planet Venus. The comet, named Comet ATLAS (C/2024 G3), is making a beeline for the ...
Over the weekend, comet C/2024 (ATLAS) made a grand appearance in images from the ESA/NASA Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO). The comet will continue to blaze through SOHO’s view for the ...
This comet will be closer to the sun which help illuminate it. On the other hand, this makes the window to view it much smaller. You will still have a couple of days to try and see this comet ...