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Comet "Neowise" Spotted Glowing in the Night Sky

20 July 2020 10:21 WIB

The Comet C/2020 or "Neowise" is seen in the sky over Ortenbourg castle, near Scherwiller, France early July 20, 2020. Look up toward the stars this month, and you just might spot the brightest comet to grace Northern Hemisphere skies in decades. In July 2020, comet NEOWISE (short for C/2020 F3 NEOWISE) has thrilled skywatchers in North America, in Europe, and in space. REUTERS/Christian Hartmann

20 Juli 2020 00:00 WIB

Anthony Gormley's Angel of the North sculpture is seen in Gateshead, Britain July 19, 2020. If you don't spot the comet this time around, you won't get another chance. It has a long, elliptical orbit, so it will be approximately 6,800 years before NEOWISE returns to the inner parts of the solar system. REUTERS/Lee Smith

20 Juli 2020 00:00 WIB

The Comet C/2020 or "Neowise" is seen in the sky from the "Puerto del Viento" mountain pass (1190 metres/3904 feet altitude) at dawn in Ronda, southern Spain, July 15, 2020. Comet Neowise has a nucleus measuring roughly 5 kilometers (3 miles) in diameter, and its dust and ion tails stretch hundreds of thousands to millions of kilometers while pointing away from the Sun. REUTERS/Jon Nazca

20 Juli 2020 00:00 WIB

The Comet C/2020 or "Neowise" is seen in the sky behind the Chapel of the Immaculate Conception at Ahrax Point on Marfa Ridge, outside the village of Mellieha, Malta July 19, 2020. Look up toward the stars this month, and you just might spot the brightest comet to grace Northern Hemisphere skies in decades. In July 2020, comet NEOWISE (short for C/2020 F3 NEOWISE) has thrilled skywatchers in North America, in Europe, and in space. REUTERS/Darrin Zammit Lupi

20 Juli 2020 00:00 WIB

The Comet C/2020 or "Neowise" is seen in the sky from the "Puerto del Viento" mountain pass (1190 metres/3904 feet altitude) at dawn in Ronda, southern Spain, July 15, 2020. If you don't spot the comet this time around, you won't get another chance. It has a long, elliptical orbit, so it will be approximately 6,800 years before NEOWISE returns to the inner parts of the solar system. REUTERS/Jon Nazca

20 Juli 2020 00:00 WIB

The Comet C/2020 or "Neowise" is seen in the sky over the bed of a drained area of the Sasyk-Sivash lake near the city of Yevpatoria, Crimea July 18, 2020. Picture taken July 18, 2020. Comet Neowise has a nucleus measuring roughly 5 kilometers (3 miles) in diameter, and its dust and ion tails stretch hundreds of thousands to millions of kilometers while pointing away from the Sun. REUTERS/Alexey Pavlishak

20 Juli 2020 00:00 WIB