Comet ISON, once optimistically called the comet of the century, is dead, the victim of a brush with the sun that was way too close. It was barely a year old.
The comet, which excited astronomers and the media as it zipped within 1,174,821 kilometres of the sun, has been pronounced dead at a scientific conference this week. Astronomers who had followed the ice ball mourned the loss of the sky show that once promised to light up during December.
Naval Research Lab astronomer Karl Battams, who headed the observing campaign for the comet, said ISON was stretched and pulled by the sun's powerful gravity. It was also hit with solar radiation. And the icy snowball just fell apart.
"At this point it seems like there is nothing left," Battams said at the American Geophysical Union conference in San Francisco. "Sorry, everyone, Comet ISON is dead. But its memory will live on."