The bright tail of a comet doesn’t actually stream out behind it. Instead, the tail points away from the sun, showing off all the ice, dust, and gas blown off the comet by the solar wind. Because the tail is tied to the sun’s direction and not the comet’s trajectory, comets sometimes have a second tail, called the anti-tail. The anti-tail consists of material that came off the comet previously, so it does mark the comet’s previously traveled path. In this image of Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS from October 2024 the dimmer anti-tail points opposite of the brighter tail. That means the comet’s direction of travel is diagonally upward, from right to left. Since that aligns with its bright tail, we can tell that the comet is moving away from the sun in this photo. (Image credit: B. Fulda; via APOD)
A Comet’s Two Tails

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