Arcing toward a fiery fate, this Sungrazer comet was recorded by the SOHO
spacecraft's Large Angle Spectrometric
COronagraph(LASCO) on December 23, 1996. LASCO
uses an occulting disk, partially visible at the lower right, to block out the
otherwise overwhelming solar disk allowing it to image the inner 8 million
kilometers of the relatively faint corona. The comet
is seen as its coma enters the bright equatorial solar wind region (oriented vertically). Positioned in
space to continuously
observe the Sun, SOHO has now been used to discover over 1,500
comets, including numerous
sungrazers.
Based on their orbits, the vast majority of sungrazers are
believed to belong to the Kreutz family of sungrazing
comets created by successive break ups from a
single large parent comet that passed very near the Sun in the twelfth century.
The Great Comet of 1965,
Ikeya-Seki, was also a member of the Kreutz family, coming within about
650,000 kilometers of the Sun's surface. Passing so close to the Sun, Sungrazers are
subjected to destructive tidal forces along with
intense solar heat. This small comet, known as the Christmas Comet SOHO 6, did not
survive. Later this year, Comet
ISON, potentially the brightest
sungrazer in recorded history but not a Kreutz sungrazer, is expected to
survive.
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