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Interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS’ journey through our solar system, in photos

Late last month, NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope tracked 3I/ATLAS when it was approximately 178 million miles away from Earth. Hubble’s instruments recorded the moving comet as a luminous point while the background stars appeared as streaks of light. NASA released the images on Thursday and said it intends to gather more data on 3I/ATLAS in the coming months as the comet moves out of the solar system.

The European Space Agency released new photos of 3I/ATLAS the same day, adding to our understanding of the interstellar object’s appearance, composition and behavior. The agency’s Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer, or Juice — a spacecraft en route to Jupiter to study the planet and three of its large moons — gathered the data shortly before the spacecraft’s closest approach to the comet on Nov. 4, when it flew within about 41 million miles.

The photos from Juice showed the glowing halo of the comet’s coma and revealed the possibility that it has two tails. The first, the comet’s “plasma tail,” is made up of ionized or electrically charged gas and can be seen extending toward the top of the frame. The second, the comet’s “dust tail,” is made up of gas, dust and other tiny solid particles; it stretches to the lower left of the frame.

The European Space Agency expects to retrieve additional data from Juice’s science instruments in February.

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