Rare comet to flash through New Zealand skies – before it disappears for 170,000 years

The Guardian World ·

Rare comet to flash through New Zealand skies – before it disappears for 170,000 years

A comet formed on the edges of the solar system will grace southern skies over the next fortnight, giving viewers a rare chance to glimpse it before it disappears from view for another 170,000 years. …

A comet formed on the edges of the solar system will grace southern skies over the next fortnight, giving viewers a rare chance to glimpse it before it disappears from view for another 170,000 years. The comet – known as C/2025 R3 PanSTARRS – had been travelling through the northern hemisphere but has “swung around the sun” and is now visible in the south, said Josh Aoraki, an astronomer at Te Whatu Stardome in Auckland, New Zealand . The comet is fairly bright, but people would need binoculars, a telescope or a camera to see it, Aoraki said. “It’s not naked-eye brightness … [but] this one is a decently easy one to photograph, which is always nice,” he said. The comet will gradually decrease in brightness over the next two weeks, and interested viewers in New Zealand, Australia, South Africa and the Pacific should aim to capture it as soon as possible, Aoraki said. Those wishing to see the comet should find a clear, unobstructed view of the western horizon just after sunset, when the comet is still low in the sky. It will be most visible in the hour after the sun goes down. For those who do manage to spy it, they can expect to see a blue-green orb – a temporary gas around the nucleus, called a coma – and a smudgy tail. “You get the coma and the tail looking like a little fuzzy meteor in the sky.” C/2025 R3 PanSTARRS originates in the Oort Cloud – a vast shell of icy comet-like objects surrounding the distant-most edges of our solar system. …

Original source: The Guardian World

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