New Comet With Great Potential – C/2023 A3 (Tsuchinshan-ATLAS)
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A spectacular comet that may outshine even the brightest stars in the night sky is approaching our planet. The comet, initially mistaken as an asteroid, has been named C/2023 A3 Tsuchinshan-ATLAS. Despite having an initial magnitude of 18, far too faint to be seen with the naked eye, the comet is now quickly approaching us. It will make its closest approach to Earth in October 2024 and could be the best one we will ever see in decades. However, there’s a problem associated with it, in the video published on March 20, 2023, by The Secrets of the Universe, as “A Dazzling Comet is Approaching us! It Will Outshine Brightest Stars“, below:
A comet visiting the inner solar system for the first time in 80,000 years – or possibly ever – should be the best for several years, putting 2023’s “green comet” in the shade. A comet that will make a (somewhat) close approach to the Earth in September 2024 is already creating excitement among amateur astronomers. Comets are unpredictable beasts, and a great many have proven disappointing – but C/2023 A3 (Tsuchinshan-ATLAS) has many of the characteristics required to put on the best display for at least a decade. Comets visit the inner solar system quite frequently, but few can be seen with the naked eye. Most are either regular visitors (short period) that have been slowly losing material on previous approaches to the Sun and don’t have enough left to be very bright. Others never get close enough to Earth to put on a show. Tsuchinshan-ATLAS passes both those tests. Its orbit is so long it there is debate as to whether it visited the inner solar system 80,000 years ago, or if it never has. At the closest approach, it will be 58 million kilometers (36 million miles) or just under 0.39 AU (Earth-Sun distance) from the Earth. Estimates for cometary brightness have a great deal more uncertainty than for its path. This is no giant object like the mega comet Bernardinelli-Bernstein. However, we can already see signs of a tail as low melting point ices sublimate to gas, even though it is still considerably further from the Sun than Jupiter. By the time Tsuchinshan-ATLAS is inside the orbit of Venus, gases will be streaming off it, taking dust with them and producing a tail that is likely to stretch a long way across the sky. How far and how bright the tail will depend greatly on the exact compositions of rock and ice that make up Tsuchinshan-ATLAS, and whether it holds together or breaks up in the scorching rays of the Sun, in the video publishsed on March 9, 2023, by The Cosmos News, as “Approaching New Comet Will Outshine All the Stars in the Sky Next Year @TheCosmosNews“, below:
C/2023 A3 (tsuchinshan – Atlas) could be the best comet since comet neowise in 2020 expected to reach a magnitude of 0.7, its brighter than comet neowise mag 1! Forward scattering could even increase it to mag -5 which is crazy and as bright as comet mcnaught from 2006, in the video published on March 4, 2023, by Pawstronomy, as “What To expect from Comet C/2023 A3 (Tsushinshan-ATLAS) The Next Great Comet 4K“, below:
Gathered, written, and posted by Windermere Sun-Susan Sun Nunamaker More about the community at www.WindermereSun.com
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