New York – A newly discovered green comet tracked by the telescopes probably collapsed by the sun, breaking the hope of a naked-eyed spectrum.
Comet Suan, who came from Ort Cloud, has been visible through telescopes and binoculars with its streaming tail over the past few weeks, but experts say it may not survive its recent travel by the sun and is fading rapidly.
“Soon we will only leave the pile of dusty ruin,” astronomer Carl Batams said in an email with the US Naval Research Laboratory.
Comet frozen gas and dust ball billions of years ago. Every time, a comet goes through the internal solar system.
Jason Eberra, director of the West Virginia University Planetarium and Observatory, said, “The solar system remains from the first formed.”
The new comet was discovered by amateur astronomers, who spying on a camera in a spacecraft run by NASA and European Space Agency for sun study.
The comet will not shake around the world like Suu Kyeshan-Atlas last year. Among the other notable flybies were included in Neois in 2020 and Hel-Bopp and Hayakuta in the 1990s.
Comet, C/2025 F2 nominee, was also visible just after the darkness of the sun. Its green color was difficult to see with an empty eye.
Batams said it could be for the first time in the past of the sun, it was especially weak in order to be separated, Batams said. After the flybie, the rest of the comet will disappear within the outdoors of the solar system, in the past where scientists think it comes from.
Batams said, “It’s going to go so far that we have no idea whether it will ever come back.”
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Associated Press Health and Science Department has received the support of the Science and Educational Media Group and Robert Wood Johnson Foundation of the Hughes Medical Institute. AP is the sole responsible for all content.
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