**Astronomy Picture of the Day**

e85ed75286cb7747...

npub1ap0dw55xedm5w4mkcyq8m7xyluwfc680lywrvfe50vr9ckl5m3uqtf5l75

hex

1923b313ba76183a6d09648f6dff8eacc52dde72f9bbc72adcb9ecdc06600320

nevent

nevent1qqspjganzwa8vxp6d5ykfrmdl782e3fdmee0nw789twtnmxuqesqxgqprpmhxue69uhhyetvv9ujuem4d36kwatvw5hx6mm9qgswshkh22rvka682amvzqralrz078yudrhlj8pkyu68kpjut06dc7qmvl2s3

Kind-1 (TextNote)

2026-05-12T04:09:01Z

Astronomy Picture of the Day

12 May 2026

The Conjunction of Comet R3 PanSTARRS and the Orion Nebula

Image: https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/image/2605/CometR3_Orion.jpg

Credit: Not provided

Today’s composite image features something old , something new, something borrowed, and something blue! Comet R3 PanSTARRS , streaking across the right of the image, likely originated from the Oort Cloud , meaning it is an old Solar System relic from billions of years ago. It’s bright extended ion tail glows blue as the gas escaping the comet’s core is ionized by sunlight. Astronomers are fascinated by comets for all sorts of reasons: comet compositions are untouched time capsules containing the building blocks of Solar System planets; comets may have delivered water to the young Earth; the behavior of cometary tails shed light on solar wind and radiation interactions. The background mosaic, featuring the Orion Nebula ( M42 ), was taken over two nights of observation with the comet captured on the third night. The Orion Nebula is our nearest stellar nursery and, at about 2 million years old , is our something (relatively) new! Now at around 127.5 million kilometers from Earth , we wave goodbye to the borrowed Comet R3 PanSTARRS as it leaves the Solar System.

#APOD #CometR3 #PanSTARRS #OrionNebula #M42 #OortCloud

https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap260512.html

原始 JSON

{
  "kind": 1,
  "id": "1923b313ba76183a6d09648f6dff8eacc52dde72f9bbc72adcb9ecdc06600320",
  "pubkey": "e85ed75286cb77475776c1007df8c4ff1c9c68eff91c3627347b065c5bf4dc78",
  "created_at": 1778558941,
  "tags": [],
  "content": "**Astronomy Picture of the Day**\n\n12 May 2026\n\n**The Conjunction of Comet R3 PanSTARRS and the Orion Nebula**\n\nImage: https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/image/2605/CometR3_Orion.jpg\n\nCredit: Not provided\n\nToday’s composite image features something old , something new, something borrowed, and something blue! Comet R3 PanSTARRS , streaking across the right of the image, likely originated from the Oort Cloud , meaning it is an old Solar System relic from billions of years ago. It’s bright extended ion tail glows blue as the gas escaping the comet’s core is ionized by sunlight. Astronomers are fascinated by comets for all sorts of reasons: comet compositions are untouched time capsules containing the building blocks of Solar System planets; comets may have delivered water to the young Earth; the behavior of cometary tails shed light on solar wind and radiation interactions. The background mosaic, featuring the Orion Nebula ( M42 ), was taken over two nights of observation with the comet captured on the third night. The Orion Nebula is our nearest stellar nursery and, at about 2 million years old , is our something (relatively) new! Now at around 127.5 million kilometers from Earth , we wave goodbye to the borrowed Comet R3 PanSTARRS as it leaves the Solar System.\n\n#APOD #CometR3 #PanSTARRS #OrionNebula #M42 #OortCloud\n\nhttps://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap260512.html\n",
  "sig": "4d66d79aae358a185bcfe46d6954bf20f8d13af8c1365a07fa6e79278f15c6d05b789a27bf50468b3e44e304b09e068489c070327e340c1bc8a8538859ec74cf"
}