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Comet-Sun Impact Caught On Video

jomegat writes "NASA has released footage captured by the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) showing a comet slamming into the surface of the sun. The impact created a huge splash as seen on the video, but the impact at the surface was blocked by an occluding disk that allows the SDO to image the sun's corona. It's still very impressive though!"

5 of 61 comments (clear)

  1. Not quite as advertised by artor3 · · Score: 4, Informative

    The "huge splash" is an unrelated coronal mass ejection. There is no actual splash, or "collision" in the sense we would imagine it. Which should be obvious when you stop to think about it, because the Sun is really freaking hot. The comet evaporated when it got too close.

    Still, a pretty cool video. It's always cool to see how tiny things look when they get close to the Sun. In the first video, you'll probably have to watch it a few times before you even notice the comet.

    1. Re:Not quite as advertised by Bill+Currie · · Score: 4, Informative

      Go fast enough, and even the extremely rarefied gases in interstellar space might as well be a brick wall.

      --

      Bill - aka taniwha
      --
      Leave others their otherness. -- Aratak

  2. Re:Finally!!! by jc42 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Some asshat on facebook complained that the sun doesn't have a surface, ...

    Similarly, if you look closely enough at what appears to be your (skin) surface, you'll find that in reality it's nothing more substantive than a fuzzy cloud of electrons. Small neutral particles of about the same size as the electrons (neutrons, neutrinos, etc.) have no problem with this "surface", and pass through it as if it didn't exist.

    Whether something has a "surface" depends a lot on your definition of the term.

    --
    Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
  3. Re:One day you'll look to see I've gone by NoNonAlphaCharsHere · · Score: 4, Funny

    There's a little black spot on the sun today.
    It's the same old thing as yesterday.

  4. Re:Surface? by GumphMaster · · Score: 4, Informative

    The term "surface" when used in relation to the Sun is used to mean the place from which the majority of photons we see are emitted; known as the photosphere. That surface is defined to be at optical depth 2/3 (a photon, on average, escapes without scattering off a particle). It is a fuzzy boundary, varying in depth with wavelength of light, but it is a small range in comparison to the size of a star.

    --
    Patent litigation: A doctrine of Mutually Assured Destruction... in which everyone seems willing to push the button