The "once-in-a-lifetime" comet that recently lit up night skies for the first time in millennia might be falling apart after ...
Comet ATLAS (C/2024 G3) came within 8.3 million miles of the sun on January 13 as it reached its perihelion, and is now disintegrating.
Experts think the comet started breaking up last week, but it's still putting on a show for star gazers for a few more days.
Comet ATLAS brightens as it nears the Sun, providing scientists with valuable data on solar wind interactions and offering a ...
In the photo from the space station, the comet is captured just above Earth’s horizon, which is illuminated by a bright light ...
A once-in-a-lifetime comet is approaching the sun — and it will be visible for the first time in 160,000 years. The comet ...
G3 (ATLAS) did it! It survived its perilous perihelion, getting ten times closer to the Sun than Earth does. This comet is a ...
The comet comes from the Oort Cloud, a remote region at the outer edge of the solar system that is believed to contain the ...
G3 may be hard to see due to weather patterns and the California wildfires, said Tim Brothers of the Massachusetts Institute ...
G3 (ATLAS) is now visible in the post-sunset night sky. It's best seen in the Southern Hemisphere, but it's visible north of ...
Comet ATLAS hit a maximum magnitude of -3.4 during its close encounter with the sun, just shy of the brightness of Venus in ...
It last passed nearby 180,000 years ago and the next few nights could be your last chance to ever see it as it drifts over ...