Skip to main content

New NASA mission captures a gorgeous cosmic rainbow

On April 18, 2025, the WFI-2 instrument (which captured its first light on April 14) took images through all three of its polarizers in succession for the first time to create this view. The image is colorized to show the polarization (or angle) of the zodiacal light, a faint glow from dust orbiting the Sun.
On April 18, 2025, the WFI-2 instrument (which captured its first light on April 14) took images through all three of its polarizers in succession for the first time to create this view. The image is colorized to show the polarization (or angle) of the zodiacal light, a faint glow from dust orbiting the Sun. NASA/SwRI

A new NASA mission is already collecting data and producing striking images of the solar system. Launched in March, the PUNCH (Polarimeter to Unify the Corona and Heliosphere) mission aims to study the sun’s corona and how the sun interacts with the wider environment of the solar system. Made up of four small suitcase-sized satellites, the mission is able to capture a continuous view of the entire inner solar system thanks to a camera placed on each satellite.

Before PUNCH can start doing science though, its instruments need to be brought online. As part of that process, PUNCH’s Wide Field Imager 2 captured an image of the zodiacal light coming from the sun. This faint glow, often seen before sunrise and known as false dawn, is a result of sunlight being scattered by the dust which floats through the solar system.

Recommended Videos

In the full image below, you can see a rainbow of zodiacal light, with the position of the sun marked by a star. The image uses color to represent features of the light: the hue of the light represents its direction, and the amount of saturation represents the degree of polarization. This data also shows background stars in white, like the Pleiades star cluster above the center of the image and the Hyades star cluster, a V-shaped cluster located toward the upper left.

Other instruments on board PUNCH also collected early data, including one which captured a striking view of the moon. This image was taken by the Narrow Field Imager (NFI), which is a type of instrument called a coronagraph that has a dark disk that is used to block out light from the sun. That allows less bright objects to be seen — in this case, the moon.

The NFI will be used to study the sun’s corona, so the purpose of this image was to check whether the moon would obscure the view — and the good news is that the moon won’t interfere with the science data, as it isn’t too bright compared to the background light being studied.

PUNCH will now continue collecting data, with two more instruments to be commissioned within the next few weeks before full science operations begin in June.

Georgina Torbet
Georgina has been the space writer at Digital Trends space writer for six years, covering human space exploration, planetary…
NASA+ blasts off on Prime Video — for free
SpaceX Crew-5 launches for the International Space Station in October 2022.

Space fans are in for a treat after NASA launched a FAST (Free Ad-Supported Television) channel on Prime Video for its NASA+ coverage.

This means you can now watch live rocket launches, behind-the-scenes mission coverage, documentaries, and high-definition space imagery directly through Prime Video, even without a Prime subscription or ads. NASA’s new FAST channel, NASA+, is available on Prime Video in the Live TV or Watch for Free sections.

Read more
Enjoy a meteor shower Monday night … and other skywatching tips from NASA
The Lyrid meteor shower

A new month has just started and so NASA has returned with some tips on the exciting stuff to look out for over the coming weeks.

Eta Aquarid meteor shower

Read more
See the terrifying face of the sun, captured by a brand-new instrument
A narrow-band image of the Sun at a wavelength of λ=588.9nm.

The sun might be responsible for light and life on Earth, but it can also be terrifying. The first image from the brand new Visible Tunable Filter (VTF) instrument at the Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope shows the sun's surface in detail, highlight a patch of sunspots that looks like something out of a horror movie.

The image is the "first light" of the new instrument, meaning it is the first full image captured since the VTF was installed. It is a type of instrument called an imaging spectro-polarimeter, which takes two dimensional images of the sun in particular wavelengths. Whilst most cameras, and our eyes, can detect a range of wavelengths, this instrument takes images of just one wavelength at a time, adjusting through different wavelengths by tiny differences of a billionth of a meter. In effect, it's like taking a series of different photographs, each one filtered for a different color.

Read more