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ison

ISON, officially designated C/2012 S1 (ISON), was a long-period comet discovered on 21 September 2012 by Vitali Nevski and Artyom Novichonok at the International Scientific Optical Network (ISON) near Kislovodsk, Russia. The discovery by the ISON collaboration drew attention to the possibility that the object could become one of the brightest comets visible from Earth in late 2013.

It was on a highly elongated, nearly parabolic orbit with a predicted perihelion distance of about 0.012

However, in the weeks leading up to perihelion, the nucleus underwent fragmentation and loss of material. By

The ISON event is cited as a notable example of a sungrazing comet whose interior structure and

astronomical
units
from
the
Sun,
scheduled
for
28
November
2013.
As
it
approached
the
Sun,
observers
anticipated
a
spectacular
display,
potentially
visible
even
in
daylight.
October
2013,
the
comet’s
nucleus
had
not
been
detected;
by
the
time
of
perihelion,
observers
reported
only
faint
debris,
and
no
active
nucleus
or
coma
remained.
response
to
solar
heating
determined
its
fate.
It
also
highlighted
uncertainties
in
predicting
comet
brightness
and
the
challenges
of
observing
a
fragile
body
near
the
Sun.
The
discovery
underscores
the
role
of
the
ISON
network
in
coordinating
observations
of
small
bodies
in
the
Solar
System.