From Comet NEOWISE to Comet Interceptor

ESA Wednesday, 22 July 2020 ()
From Comet NEOWISE to Comet InterceptorVideo: 00:06:01

Discovered in March 2020, Comet NEOWISE became visible to the naked eye in July, gifting observers in the northern hemisphere with the first 'great comet’ in over 20 years. The comet, which is on an almost parabolic orbit and had its closest approach to the Sun, or perihelion, in early July, reaches its closest point to Earth on 22–23 July, before zipping back towards the outer Solar System.

In this video, ESA Research Fellows Rachana Bhatawdekar and Sandor Kruk share their experience and explain how to observe and image the comet in the sky. Next, ESA Research Fellow Charlotte Götz tells us more about comets and their tails, and how ESA’s future Comet Interceptor mission, to be launched in 2028, is going to wait for such a ‘great’ comet that has not been discovered yet. The spacecraft will sit in a parking orbit around the Lagrange point L2, 1.5 million kilometres away from Earth, until an interesting ‘pristine’ comet visits the inner Solar System. It will then intersect the comet's orbit to study its nucleus, gases, dust, and plasma environment.

More about Comet Interceptor

Image credits: Rachana Bhatawdekar, Sandor Kruk, Mark McCaughrean, Kai Noeske (2020)

Preview image: Courtesy Mark McCaughrean, 12 July 2020 (Wassenaar, The Netherlands)
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Video Credit: Newsflare STUDIO - Published
News video: Remarkable 4K timelapse video shows Comet Neowise hurtling through the Pennsylvania night sky

Remarkable 4K timelapse video shows Comet Neowise hurtling through the Pennsylvania night sky 00:38

A stargazer in Pennsylvania captured this impressive footage of Comet Neowise soaring over the night sky on Saturday (July 18).