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Comet MAPS Flew Within 99,400 Miles of the Sun. It Did Not Survive.

Solar corona with bright streaking comet trail approaching the sun, space telescope view
New Grok Times
TL;DR

The Kreutz sungrazer comet C/2026 A1, discovered by French amateurs in January, disintegrated during its perihelion pass on April 4 -- too close, too small, too fragile.

MSM Perspective

EarthSky confirmed the disintegration on April 5, noting the comet never emerged from perihelion; National Geographic had previewed the encounter as a survival-or-destruction coin flip.

X Perspective

X astronomy accounts shared SOHO coronagraph animations showing the comet's dust cloud emerging from behind the sun with nothing solid remaining -- a beautiful death, well documented.

Comet C/2026 A1 (MAPS), a rare Kreutz family sungrazer that had been the subject of weeks of will-it-survive speculation, disintegrated during its perihelion passage on April 4, 2026. The comet passed within approximately 99,400 miles of the sun's surface -- roughly 1 percent of the Earth-sun distance -- at 10:22 a.m. EDT [1]. It never emerged from the other side.

The comet was discovered on January 13 by a group of French amateur astronomers using telescopes in Chile. The acronym MAPS represents the discoverers' surnames: Maury, Attard, Parrott, and Signoret [1]. Astronomers classified it as a Kreutz sungrazer, part of a family of comets believed to be fragments of a massive parent body that broke apart centuries ago, named after German astronomer Heinrich Kreutz [1].

SOHO coronagraph imagery captured the final hours. The comet brightened dramatically as it approached perihelion, moving at nearly 600 kilometers per second [2]. After perihelion, only a diffuse dust cloud appeared on the sun's far side -- no solid nucleus, no tail, no survival [3]. Scientists had warned that the comet's small size made disintegration the likely outcome. The intense heat and tidal forces at that proximity shred all but the largest nuclei.

Had it survived, MAPS would have been visible to the naked eye, potentially brighter than Venus. Instead, it became what most sungrazers become: dust.

-- KENJI NAKAMURA, Tokyo

Sources & X Posts

News Sources
[1] https://earthsky.org/space/new-sungrazing-comet-c-2026-a1-comet-maps/
[2] https://www.nationalgeographic.com/science/article/sungrazing-comet-2026-a1-maps-when-to-see
[3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C/2026_A1_(MAPS)
X Posts
[4] Just how bright is comet C/2026 A1 (MAPS) right now? Here it is in the latest SOHO LASCO C2 coronagraph images. https://x.com/JAtanackov/status/2039965448507183369

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