THE SODIUM TAIL OF MERCURY: The biggest comet in the Solar System is actually a planet. It’s Mercury
On Dec. 3rd, Steven Bellavia photographed Mercury's magnificent tail from Surry, Virginia
"This 24 million kilometer plume of gas is being ejected from Mercury due to the sun, very much like a comet," says Bellavia.
First predicted in the 1980s, Mercury’s tail was discovered in 2001. Its source is Mercury’s super-thin atmosphere. Mercury is so close to the sun, pressure from sunlight pushes atoms out of the atmosphere and into space. The most important atom is sodium, which strongly scatters sunlight and gives the tail a yellow hue. Bellavia used a narrowband filter to capture the bright yellow sodium light at 589nm.
Mercury's tail waxes and wanes in brightness as it orbits the sun. The predictable pattern is shown in this movie from NASA's MESSENGER spacecraft, which spent years observing Mercury’s tail from close range
This is an AI Free Zone: Text created by Large Language Models is spreading across the Internet. It's well-written, but frequently inaccurate. If you find a mistake on Spaceweather.com, rest assured it was made by a real human being.
GEOMAGNETIC STORM WATCH: Improved models of yesterday's CME suggest that it might hit Earth, after all. A glancing blow (or near miss) is possible on Dec. 7th, potentially sparking a minor G1-class geomagnetic storm. The CME was launched on Dec. 4th by an M6-class solar flare from sunspot 4300. Aurora alerts: SMS Text.
THE SODIUM TAIL OF MERCURY: The biggest comet in the Solar System is actually a planet. It’s Mercury. On Dec. 3rd, Steven Bellavia photographed Mercury's magnificent tail from Surry, Virginia:
"This 24 million kilometer plume of gas is being ejected from Mercury due to the sun, very much like a comet," says Bellavia.
First predicted in the 1980s, Mercury’s tail was discovered in 2001. Its source is Mercury’s super-thin atmosphere. Mercury is so close to the sun, pressure from sunlight pushes atoms out of the atmosphere and into space. The most important atom is sodium, which strongly scatters sunlight and gives the tail a yellow hue. Bellavia used a narrowband filter to capture the bright yellow sodium light at 589nm.
Mercury's tail waxes and wanes in brightness as it orbits the sun. The predictable pattern is shown in this movie from NASA's MESSENGER spacecraft, which spent years observing Mercury’s tail from close range:
For reasons having to do with the Doppler shift of sodium absorption lines in the solar spectrum, Mercury's tail is most luminous when the planet is ±16 days from perihelion (closest approach to the sun).
That special date is less than a week away: On Dec. 9th, Mercury will be 16 days past perihelion and the tail could be as much as 10 times brighter than what Bellavia saw. Take a look in the morning sky! Just don’t forget your sodium filter.
https://spaceweather.com/archive.php?view=1&day=05&month=12&year=2025
OMG…. MERCURY'S NOT REALLY A PLANET - IT'S AN ALIEN SPACECRAFT ABOUT TO INVADE EARTH - NCSWIC