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    Spectacular Christmas Comet Amazes Skywatchers in Chile

    A stunning comet that survived a recent brush with the sun is amazing astronomers again, this time in dazzling new photos captured just before sunrise over Chile.

    The comet Lovejoy may not be the famed Star of Bethlehem, but it still provided a jaw-dropping sight for astronomer Gabriel Brammer, photographed the comet rising ahead of the sun on Dec. 22 at Paranal Observatory in Chile's high Atacama Desert.  

    Brammer is a support astronomer for the European Southern Observatory (ESO), which runs the Paranal facility. His time-lapse photos of comet Lovejoy show it rising ahead of the sun as the Paranal astronomers fire a laser beam, which serves as a guide star, into the sky. Our Milky Way galaxy and the moon are also visible in the images.

    "On the last morning of my shift I tried to try catching it on camera before sunrise," Brammer said in a statement. "The tail of the comet was easily visible with the naked eye, and the combination of the crescent moon, comet, Milky Way and the laser guide star was nearly as impressive to the naked eye as it appears in the long-exposure photos."

    Brammer wasn't the only one to document comet Lovejoy's appearance over Chile. ESO optician Guillaume Blanchard captured a dazzling wide-angle view of the comet while skywatcher Yuri Beletsky photographed Lovejoy as it rose above Santiago de Chile. [Photos of Death-Defying Comet Lovejoy]

    "For me this comet is a Christmas present to the people who will stay at Paranal over Christmas," Blanchard said.

    Comet Lovejoy from the VLT, Chile from g br on Vimeo.

    Comet Lovejoy was discovered on Nov. 27 by Australian amateur astronomer Terry Lovejoy and quickly identified as a so-called Kreutz comet, a comet which flies on an orbit that swings extremely close to the sun. The comet was about 660 feet (200 meters) wide when it was first seen.

    Astronomers initially expected the comet to be destroyed when it plunged through the sun's outer atmosphere on Dec. 15. But the comet defied all predictions and survived the encounter, despite coming within 87,000 miles (140,000 km) of the sun's surface.

    Since then, comet Lovejoy has continued to provide spectacular views to skywatchers on Earth … and in space.

    On Wednesday (Dec. 21), NASA astronaut Daniel Burbank was amazed to see the comet rising over a nighttime Earth from his vantage point on the International Space Station as it sailed 240 miles above Tasmania. Burbank, who currently commands the space station, snapped about 100 photos of the cosmic sight, which NASA later assembled into a time-lapse video of comet Lovejoy.

    "When it disappeared behind the sun, I think astronomers thought it would not appear again, it would probably burn up," Burbank said in a NASA video. "But it's probably the most spectacular thing that you can imagine."

    Comet Lovejoy is now headed away from the sun as it travels along its highly eccentric orbit, ESO officials said. It may return to Earth's night sky in the year 2325, when its orbit brings it back into the inner solar system, they added.

     Follow SPACE.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

    What do you feel about this article?

     
    • Gorilla  •  Dallas, United States  •  5 months ago
      Come on Comet, Dancer, Prancer and Rudolph.
      • Peter 5 months ago
        ROFLOL Comet, Dancer, Prancer and Rudolph
    • Graham  •  Chicago, United States  •  5 months ago
      Hey idiot readers...STOP SAYING THERE ARE NEVER PICTURES WHEN THERE ARE PICTURES IN THE BLUE HYPER LINKS!! ALONG WITH VIDEOS!!!

      Oh and Merry Christmas :)
      • Send Tomee 5 months ago
        What's a hyper link dude? I see the stars without that.
    • Marked  •  5 months ago
      That is no comet that is Santa's sleigh hauling a.. back to the north pole.
    • brad  •  St Louis, United States  •  5 months ago
      Awesome.. I'll only be 341 years old on its return. I can't wait.
    • Blake  •  Kansas City, United States  •  5 months ago
      Quit writing stories about "dazzling new photos" of "jaw-dropping sights" without showing a freakin picture! This happens regularly and is really annoying to readers.
      • c c 5 months ago
        You see the blue text? That means it's a link you can follow to see pictures.
      • Mr Frost 5 months ago
        yeah, but I agree that they could easily incorporate a slideshow with the story without dragging me away from the page, a lot of times I won't even bother because of the hassle.
      • Mike 5 months ago
        you're just lazy or stupid or both.
    • Squid B  •  5 months ago
      "may return 2335"... I'll set my Outlook Calendar right now so I'm sure I don't miss it next time...
      • ILLYA 5 months ago
        thats smart lowl
      • Brandon 5 months ago
        yup, be ready for it next time! LOL
      • Yaniv 5 months ago
        Funny.
    • belle  •  5 months ago
      COOL . .

      and merry Christmas..
    • StillmadatYokoOno  •  Chicago, United States  •  5 months ago
      Yet another yahoo story with no pictures!
    • passerby  •  Southfield, United States  •  5 months ago
      Absolutely fantastic! I especially liked the video! Did you guys like it? Keep em comin! Wow! It just doesn't get any better than that!!!
    • Santa Claus  •  5 months ago
      ho Ho HO MERRY CHRISTMAS!!!!!
    • Rachel L S.  •  Parkersburg, United States  •  5 months ago
      To those wanting to see pics of it. There is a link in the article
    • A Yahoo! User  •  Altamonte Springs, United States  •  5 months ago
      2325 ??? what time of year ??? we need to start planning for viewing
    • grampamurdoc  •  5 months ago
      Can't wait till 2335 to see it again.
    • The Devil  •  Arlington, United States  •  5 months ago
      Man the pictures are amazing - I can't believe the quality of the pictures we get from outer space - It's like my eyes don't even recognize there is a picture...
    • Why Not  •  Nashville, United States  •  5 months ago
      I'm s tired of all the lazy people who can't seem to comprehend or grasp a story unless it has pictures to show you what you are too lazy to read about, or don't have the imagination to think about. Plus...there is a link to the pictures in story. How lazy can people get?
    • Mr Frost  •  5 months ago
      How big this thing must be to survive those temps, it's amazing that anything could survive those temps, anyone have any ideas why wouldn't just melt away?
    • Ha  •  5 months ago
      Merry Christmas!
    • Jeff  •  Elkhorn, United States  •  5 months ago
      That comet is absolutely incredible!!! A once in a multiple-lifetime event. I follow space science to an almost obsessive degree, and If someone told me that something could essentially crash into the Sun and survive.... I would have laughed them out of the room. We are either VERY wrong about our theories of how hot the surface of the Sun is... Or that Comet is made of something we will NEVER understand.... Either way... Comet Lovejoy surviving that trip, to me, was extremely humbling. I may just be a SUPER GEEK Daddy like my young Daughters call me. But we seriously got front row seats to something that The Human race may never see again. Comet Lovejoy earns my respect as the Toughest S.O.B. in the Milkyway Galaxy!!!
    • HooFest  •  Denver, United States  •  5 months ago
      I clicked on the link to this story to see the stunning pictures of Comet Lovejoy from the Atacama Desert in Chile. NO PICTURES = FAIL for this story!
    • Lady Trinitie  •  Colorado Springs, United States  •  5 months ago
      There are plenty of pictures, why the complaints about no pictures?
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