Comet ISON went around the sun on Nov. 28, 2013. Several solar
observatories watched the comet throughout this closest approach to the
sun, known as perihelion. While the fate of the comet is not yet
established, it is likely that it did not survive the trip. The comet
grew faint while within both the view of NASA's Solar Terrestrial
Relations Observatory, and the joint European Space Agency and NASA's
Solar and Heliospheric Observatory. The comet was not visible at all in
NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory.
We didn't see Comet ISON in SDO," said Dean Pesnell, project scientist for SDO.
"So we think it must have broken up and evaporated before it reached perihelion."
While this means that Comet ISON will not be visible in the night sky
in December, the wealth of observations gathered of the comet over the
last year will provide great research opportunities for some time. One
important question will simply be to figure out why it is no longer
visible.
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