Science and Exploration

Dark Energy Camera Catches Breathtaking Glimpse of Comet Lovejoy

By Keith Cowing
Press Release
February 27, 2015
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Dark Energy Camera Catches Breathtaking Glimpse of Comet Lovejoy
Comet Lovejoy
Marty Murphy, Nikolay Kuropatkin, Huan Lin, and Brian Yanny

On December 27, 2014, while scanning the southern sky as part of the Dark Energy Survey, researchers snapped a shot of comet Lovejoy.
The image was captured using the 570-megapixel Dark Energy Camera, the world’s most powerful digital camera. Each of the rectangular shapes in the image represents one of the 62 individual fields of the camera. At the time the image was taken, the comet was passing about 51 million miles from Earth — a short distance for the Dark Energy Camera, which is sensitive to light up to 8 billion light-years away. The comet’s center is a ball of ice roughly three miles across, and the visible head of the comet is a cloud of gas and dust about 400,000 miles in diameter.

Contact:
Andre Salles
Fermilab Office of Communication
+1 630-840-6733
asalles@fnal.gov

Image credit:
Fermilab’s Marty Murphy, Nikolay Kuropatkin, Huan Lin, and Brian Yanny

SpaceRef co-founder, Explorers Club Fellow, ex-NASA, Away Teams, Journalist, Space & Astrobiology, Lapsed climber.