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michaelmozina
Guest
I have noticed that starting on 1-18, SOHO's Lasco C3 images seem to show a comet (or some particle) traversing the image. On 1-18 it entered the image at about the 10:00 position, evidently a bit above the plane of the solar system. It appears to be cruising through the solar system at a very high rate of speed, and it did not crash into the sun. While I am somewhat familiar with the optics of the EIT equipment, I'm not all that familiar with the Lasco equipment. Is there any reasonable way to calculate the velocity of the object seen in that image, or is it too distorted by the lenses of the Lasco equipment at that distance to be useful? <div class="Discussion_UserSignature"> It seems to be a natural consequence of our points of view to assume that the whole of space is filled with electrons and flying electric ions of all kinds. - Kristian Birkeland </div>