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Green comet Nishimura will reach closest point to Earth today, and it won’t be back for another 430 years


The recently discovered Comet Nishimura pictured in the sky above Sunset Crater Volcano National Monument in Arizona on Sept. 9. (Image credit: Jeremy Perez / perezmedia.net)

An extremely bright comet that was only discovered last month is set to make its closest approach to Earth today (Sept. 12) as it falls rapidly toward the sun. The icy object, known as “Comet Nishimura,” will soon be slingshotted around our star and back into the outer reaches of the solar system, where it will remain for the next four centuries.

The comet, which gives off a green glow, was discovered Aug. 12 by amateur Japanese astronomer Hideo Nishimura. The object, also designated C/2023 P1, likely originates from the Oort Cloud — a reservoir of comets and other icy objects beyond the orbit of Neptune — and has a hyperbolic orbit, which means it spends most of its orbit in the outer solar system before rapidly falling toward the sun and slingshotting around it. 

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