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Comets in the News

Kartavya Desk Staff

Source: TOI

Context: Two rare celestial visitors — Comet C/2025 R2 (SWAN) and Comet C/2025 A6 (Lemmon) — have been captured over Indian skies this week, marking a rare dual appearance of bright comets.

About Comets in the News:

Comet C/2025 R2 (SWAN):

• Detected by the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory’s SWAN instrument.

• Has a faint but visible tail; will not return for nearly 20,000 years.

• Currently visible above the Sagittarius constellation in the southern horizon.

Comet C/2025 A6 (Lemmon):

• Brighter of the two, with a magnitude of 4.5, near visual threshold.

• Can be seen near the Bootes constellation, close to the Big Dipper.

• Expected to return only in 3175, making this appearance a once-in-a-millennium event.

About Comets:

What They Are? Comets are cosmic snowballs made of frozen gases, dust, and rocky material that orbit the Sun. When heated by sunlight, they release gases and form a glowing coma and tail.

• Comets are cosmic snowballs made of frozen gases, dust, and rocky material that orbit the Sun. When heated by sunlight, they release gases and form a glowing coma and tail.

How They Occur? Most originate from two distant reservoirs: The Kuiper Belt — source of short-period comets (orbit < 200 years). The Oort Cloud — home of long-period comets, which may take millions of years to complete an orbit. Features: Nucleus: Frozen solid core of ice and dust. Coma: Cloudy atmosphere formed when ice vaporizes near the Sun. Tails: Two distinct tails — a dust tail and an ion tail — that always point away from the Sun. Importance: Comets are remnants from the solar system’s formation (4.6 billion years ago) and may have delivered water and organic compounds to early Earth, aiding life’s origin. Naming: According to the International Astronomical Union (IAU), comets are named after their discoverer(s) or the spacecraft/instrument that first detected them — e.g., Comet NEOWISE, Comet Lemmon, or Comet SWAN.

• Most originate from two distant reservoirs: The Kuiper Belt — source of short-period comets (orbit < 200 years). The Oort Cloud — home of long-period comets, which may take millions of years to complete an orbit.

• The Kuiper Belt — source of short-period comets (orbit < 200 years).

• The Oort Cloud — home of long-period comets, which may take millions of years to complete an orbit.

Features: Nucleus: Frozen solid core of ice and dust. Coma: Cloudy atmosphere formed when ice vaporizes near the Sun. Tails: Two distinct tails — a dust tail and an ion tail — that always point away from the Sun.

Nucleus: Frozen solid core of ice and dust.

Coma: Cloudy atmosphere formed when ice vaporizes near the Sun.

Tails: Two distinct tails — a dust tail and an ion tail — that always point away from the Sun.

Importance: Comets are remnants from the solar system’s formation (4.6 billion years ago) and may have delivered water and organic compounds to early Earth, aiding life’s origin.

Naming: According to the International Astronomical Union (IAU), comets are named after their discoverer(s) or the spacecraft/instrument that first detected them — e.g., Comet NEOWISE, Comet Lemmon, or Comet SWAN.

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

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Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

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