Comet Seen Streaking Across Tasmania's Sky Before The Aurora Dances
(MORE: Don't Miss February's Sweet Night Sky Treats)
The video first shows the sunset and a crescent moon rising. Then, Comet C/2024 G3 Atlas streaks across the sky. According to Space.com, the comet was visible in the Northern Hemisphere for a few days around mid-January but remained visible through early February in the Southern Hemisphere.
Comet C/2024 G3 Atlas became one of the few comets on record to be visible to the naked eye during daytime hours, Space.com also said.
(MORE: See – And Hear – Meteorite Crash To Earth)
Humans won't set eyes on the comet again for thousands of years, if ever again. The comet could return again in 160,000 years, if it's not already destroyed by then, according to Discover Magazine.
Swanson also caught a brilliant aurora dancing across the sky that same night. The aurora australis, or the southern lights, can be seen lighting up the sky in greens and purples later in the video.
The aurora australis can be seen in Tasmania year-round, DiscoverTasmania.com reports.
(MORE: Watch Northern Lights Shimmer Over Alaska)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Boston Globe
a day ago
- Boston Globe
Judge orders liquidation of Infowars to pay Sandy Hook families
Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up AVIATION Advertisement Startup Merlin Labs valued at $800 million in deal to go public Merlin Labs wants to test its autonomous aviation software at Hanscom. Photo courtesy of Merlin Labs Autonomous aviation startup Merlin Labs will soon be soaring into the public markets now that it has signed a deal to merge with a blank-check company early next year. The terms of the deal, with a special purpose acquisition company managed by New York-based Inflection Point, values Boston-based Merlin at $800 million, prior to the results of a follow-on private purchase of shares. Merlin chief executive Matt George says the money raised by going public will help Merlin add more employees to its 170-person workforce and also provide capital for future acquisitions. Merlin is working on tech that will allow commercial and military planes to be flown with only one pilot, and eventually without one at all. George said the firm is close to signing a lease to take over much of a former Navy hangar in Bedford at Hanscom Field, once used to house a corporate jet fleet for defense contractor Raytheon (now RTX). Merlin could eventually employ as many as 200 people there. Last year, the company landed a $105 million contract with the Department of Defense to integrate Merlin Pilot software into the C-130J airlifter manufactured by Lockheed Martin. Inflection Point chief executive Mike Blitzer will join the Merlin board as a result of the upcoming deal; Inflection Point's recent successes include two other companies launched through similar SPAC deals, USA Rare Earth (current market cap of $1.7 billion) and Intuitive Machines (worth $1.6 billion today). — JON CHESTO Advertisement HEALTH CARE Costco will not sell abortion pills after pressure from conservatives A Costco Wholesale store in Everett. Jonathan Wiggs/Globe Staff/Boston Globe Costco will not dispense a key abortion pill at its pharmacies, a long-awaited win for conservatives trying to limit access to medication abortion. For more than a year, Costco deliberated over whether to become certified to dispense mifepristone, the drug used first in the typical two-step regimen for a medication abortion. The procedure, often easier and cheaper than the surgical alternative, is the option women in America most frequently choose to end pregnancies. Costco received pressure from groups on both sides of the issue, many of them investors in the nationwide grocery giant. The company's decision not to sell the pill, first reported by Bloomberg, is a victory for antiabortion advocates — but a narrow one. Despite lawsuits and letters pleading to lawmakers, their campaign to thwart access to abortion pills has otherwise been slow-moving. Patients can still access medication abortion in all 50 states, even those where the procedure is illegal, because of laws allowing the pills to be remotely prescribed and mailed. In a statement Thursday, Costco said the decision was 'based on the lack of demand from our members and other patients.' The company did not answer further questions from The Washington Post about the influence of outside groups. — WASHINGTON POST Advertisement SPORTS LA Olympics to sell naming rights to some venues in game-changing deal for 2028 Organizers of the Los Angeles Olympics will sell naming rights for a handful of its venues in deals expected to bring multiple millions of dollars to the 2028 Games while breaking down the International Olympic Committee's long-sacrosanct policy of keeping brand names off its arenas and stadiums. The organizing committee announced the landmark deal Thursday, saying contracts were already in place with two of its founding partners — Honda, which already has naming rights for the arena in Anaheim that will host volleyball, and Comcast, which will have its name on the temporary venue hosting squash. LA28 chairman and CEO Casey Wasserman said revenue from the deals goes above what's in LA's current $6.9 billion budget. He portrayed the deal as the sort of paradigm-shifting arrangement that Los Angeles needs more than other host cities because, as is typical for American-hosted Olympics, the core cost of these games aren't backed by government funding. — ASSOCIATED PRESS HOUSING Average rate on a 30-year mortgage drops to lowest level since October A "for sale" sign displayed in front of a single-family home on July 17, 2025, in Derry, N.H. Charles Krupa/Associated Press The average rate on a 30-year US mortgage fell this week to its lowest level in nearly 10 months, giving prospective homebuyers a sorely needed boost in purchasing power that could help inject life into a stagnant housing market. The long-term rate fell to 6.58 percent from 6.63 percent last week, mortgage buyer Freddie Mac said Thursday. A year ago, the rate averaged 6.49 percent. Borrowing costs on 15-year fixed-rate mortgages, popular with homeowners refinancing their home loans, also fell. The average rate dropped to 5.71 percent from 5.75 percent last week. A year ago, it was 5.66 percent, Freddie Mac said. Elevated mortgage rates have helped keep the US housing market in a sales slump since early 2022, when rates started to climb from the rock-bottom lows they reached during the pandemic. Home sales sank last year to their lowest level in nearly 30 years. This is the fourth week in a row that rates have come down. The latest average rate on a 30-year mortgage is now at its lowest level since Oct. 24, when it averaged 6.54 percent. — ASSOCIATED PRESS Advertisement PHILANTHROPY Nike cofounder Phil Knight and wife give record $2 billion to Oregon cancer center, university says In this Sept. 26, 2015, file photo, Nike cofounder Phil Knight watched from the sidelines during the second half of an NCAA college football game between Oregon and Utah in Eugene, Ore. Ryan Kang/Associated Press Nike cofounder Phil Knight and his wife Penny Knight have pledged to donate $2 billion to Oregon Health & Science University's Knight Cancer Institute, the university announced Thursday, describing it as a record-breaking gift. 'This gift is an unprecedented investment in the millions of lives burdened with cancer, especially patients and families here in Oregon,' OHSU President Shereef Elnahal said in a statement. The donation will help ensure patients have access to various resources, including psychological, genetic, and financial counseling, symptom management, nutritional support and survivorship care, the university statement said. The university described it as the 'largest single donation ever made to a US university, college or academic health center.' It surpasses the $1.8 billion given by Michael Bloomberg to Johns Hopkins in 2018, described by that university at the time as the largest single contribution to a US university. Bloomberg also donated an additional $1 billion to Johns Hopkins last year, covering tuition, living expenses, and fees for students from families under certain income levels. — ASSOCIATED PRESS Advertisement CONSUMER SAFETY Werner recalls more than 100,000 ladders due to potential fall and injury hazard Werner on Thursday said it is recalling more than 100,000 faulty ladders due to a locking mechanism that can fail, potentially causing users to fall and injure themselves. In cooperation with federal consumer product regulators, Werner is recalling 122,250 Multi-Max Pro ladders that come in 20-foot and 24-foot sizes. The ladders were sold exclusively at Home Depot between November of 2021 and February of 2024 with prices between $200 and $281. The Illinois-based company said owners of the ladders being recalled should stop using them immediately and register at to begin the process for a full refund. Once owners have properly disposed of their ladders per Werner's instructions, the company said it will issue a check for a full refund. The ladders are silver with a blue top and a blue label on the side rail with an oval containing the word 'Werner' and 'MULTI MAX PRO.' The size and model numbers are ALMP-20IAA or ALMP-24IAA and have a long black rope in the back. Werner said it has received 18 reports of falls, including 14 reports of injuries resulting in bruising, lacerations, head injuries, and fractures to the wrist, leg, and ribs. — ASSOCIATED PRESS


USA Today
2 days ago
- USA Today
NASA's Perseverance rover captures image on Mars that resembles a helmet
NASA's Perseverance rover has added to its trove of curious finds, as the space agency published a photo of a rock on the surface of Mars that looks like a centuries-old helmet. The rock has a pointed peak, a flared "brim," and textures that could lead reasonable observers to compare it to a witch's hat or a tent. The texture is formed by spherules on the rock. Similar formations found on Earth are created through chemical weathering, mineral precipitation or volcanic processes, according to The image, taken Aug. 5 by the rover's Left Mastcam-Z camera, was chosen as the photo of the week for week 234 of its mission on Mars. "This rock's target name is Horneflya and it's distinctive less because of its hat shape (which looks to me to be generally consistent with the pyramid shape we often see in of wind-eroded float blocks on the surface of Mars) and more because it's made almost entirely of spherules," David Agle, a spokesperson for the Perseverance team at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, told the space news outlet. It is not the first time the rover has found a spherule-covered rock, having sent back a photo of a studded rock in March. Camera key to Mars discoveries The Left Mastcam-Z camera on the Perseverance can capture panoramic color and 3D images of the planet's surface, according to NASA, allowing scientists and observers to see Martian features more clearly. The rover is searching for signs of ancient microbial life as a part of a larger undertaking to understand the habitability of Mars. The helmet rock provides scientist a clue on what Mar's environmental history, according to Perseverance was sent to survey Jezero Crater to study the "wet history" of the Red Planet. The rover completed the climb to the summit of the crater in December 2024, three years after landing. "Conceivably, microbial life could have lived in Jezero during one or more of these wet times," NASA says on the home page for the mission. "If so, signs of their remains might be found in lakebed or shoreline sediments." Perseverance's research is intended to pave the way for humans to reach Mars in the years ahead under NASA's Artemis program, which will begin with astronauts returning to the moon to establish a base of operations. SpaceX founder and CEO Elon Musk has also expressed his vision of launching uncrewed trips to the Red Planet before humans reach it ‒ perhaps as early as 2028. Contributing: Eric Lagatta – USA TODAY

2 days ago
Stargazers dazzled as spirals of light appear in night sky
Stargazers on the lookout for the Perseid meteor shower were treated to an extra nighttime spectacular on Tuesday night as spirals appeared in the sky along the East Coast. The unusual light show -- which appeared to show circling lights in the heavens -- was on display after multiple rocket launches. Videos began circulating online in several states, including Maryland, New York, New Jersey, Tennessee, Illinois, Ohio and Nebraska, after 9 p.m. ET Tuesday, social media posts show. ABC Philadelphia station WPVI began receiving calls and messages from viewers around 10:30 p.m. to report the phenomenon, the station reported. The spiraling lights seemed to appear "out of nowhere," Blake Brown, who witnessed the dazzling display from Algonquin, Illinois, while watching for the meteor shower, told ABC News. The majority of the spiraling light sightings likely stemmed from the launch of Ariane 6, said Jonathan C. McDowell, an astrophysicist for the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. That rocket lifted off from the Guiana Space Centre at Europe's Spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana, at about 8:37 p.m. ET, according to Eumetsat, a European operational satellite agency for monitoring weather. Ariane 6, about 196-feet tall, has the ability to launch both heavy and light payloads for applications such as Earth observation, telecommunication, meteorology, science and navigation, according to the European Space Agency. The appearance of the spirals in the sky was likely the result of the upper stage of the rocket tumbling as it underwent a disposal rocket firing at the end of the launch, McDowell told ABC News. The spiral light occurs when reflection from sunlight interacts with the frozen plume of fuel from the exhaust of rockets. "It's a nice, perfect spiral because it's way out in space with no air to distort the shape," McDowell said. Tuesday's launch, which brought a weather satellite to orbit, is the third-ever mission for the powerful rocket, according to Another rocket, the Vulcan Centaur Rocket, successfully lifted off from the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida at 8:56 p.m. ET, according to the United Launch Alliance. The 202-foot rocket was carrying a pair of experimental navigation satellites on behalf of the United States Space Force's first-ever mission, according to "The Vulcan launched east and went to a high orbit, and was still coasting upward [without the rocket firing] when the spiral was seen," McDowell said. "If people in Florida saw something at 9:37, 9:45 pm ET, that could have been the Vulcan."