
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission.
The sungrazing comet C/2026 A1 (MAPS) has been causing a stir in recent months as it brightened during its headlong rush towards the sun, which culminates in a high stakes close approach known to astronomers as perihelion on April 4. Here's how you can watch its final do-or-die approach for yourself through the technological eye of a sungazing spacecraft.
C/2026 A1 (MAPS) is thought to belong to the Kreutz family of comets — enigmatic solar system wanderers that are thought to have a shared progenitor and whose orbits take them perilously close to our parent star.
At perihelion, C/2026 A1 (MAPS) is expected to pass just 101,100 miles (162,700 km) from the sun's photosphere — a passage that could either spell its doom as volatiles buried beneath its surface vaporize and undermine its integrity, or may even see it shine bright enough to appear in the daytime sky.
Either way, you may be able to spot the wandering solar system body as it careens towards the sun in imagery captured by the Large Angle Spectrometric Coronagraphy (LASCO) mounted on the joint ESA/NASA Solar and Heliospheric Observatory.
LASCO was designed to take detailed images of the sun's atmosphere by blocking out the light coming directly from its surface. Each of SOHO's "C3'" images captures a field of view 32 times the diameter of the sun, revealing how material ejected from its surface interacts with the space environment and, occasionally, detecting the presence of interlopers, such as C/2026 A1 (MAPS).
Space.com columnist Joe Rao forecast that comet C/2026 A1 (MAPS) will enter the LASCO instrument's field of view from 8:00 a.m. EDT (1200 GMT) on April 2 through to 1:00 a.m. EDT (0500 GMT) on April 6. It will briefly disappear as it passes into the blind spot created by the instrument's occulter disk for the four hours surrounding periohelion, before emerging back into LASCO's field of view, assuming it survives the close brush with our parent star.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
5 Chiefs That Changed Our Opinion on Film - 2
Evidence of lost baptismal rite stage uncovered in Byzantine era cathedral near Sea of Galilee - 3
Faulty glucose monitors linked to 7 deaths and more than 700 injuries, FDA warns - 4
Productive CRM Programming for Client Relationship The executives - 5
Hunger and makeshift shelters persist in north Caribbean nearly 2 months after Hurricane Melissa
12 times rockets and spacecraft crashed and burned in 2025
We analyzed Philly street scenes and identified signs of gentrification using machine learning trained on longtime residents’ observations
Astronomer captures 2 meteors slamming into the moon (video)
Mummified cheetahs found in Saudi caves shed light on lost populations
Israeli media reports Iran attacking greater Tel Aviv region
The 10 Most Progressive Logical Disclosures
The Most Encouraging New companies to Look Out For
Jamie Dimon warns Iran war could drive inflation, interest rates higher
The risk of falling space junk hitting airplanes is on the rise, experts warn













