It turns out the bright "Nbiru image former" object that saturated the SOHO image above was Venus...
Interestingly enough, there is a [cough, cough] 'winged disk' object visible there at SOHO, now. It is the planet Mercury visible @;
SOHO, Pick of the week, suicide comets from March 15, this year. Ooh, the Ides of March, and all that jazz. Ceasar stabbed, then comets dumping themselves into the Sun. Ko-inkydink? Or just Kooky? Let the reader/viewer decide!
What I find teasingly fascinating is in the textual commentary accompanying the images to the page(s) which we both linked to (the part that interests me the most, I'll underline for emphasis);
The SOHO spacecraft captured a very bright, sungrazing comet as it rocketed towards the Sun (Mar. 12, 2010) and was vaporized. This comet is arguably the brightest comet that SOHO has observed since Comet McNaught in early 2007. The comet is believed to belong to the Kreutz family of comets that broke up from a much larger comet many hundreds of years ago. They are known to orbit close to the Sun. A coronal mass ejection (CME) burst away from the Sun during the bright comets approach.
I'd swear there is a pattern. I've seen this many times at SOHO. One time in particular (a few years ago) the CME deflected a comet's tail. That particular comet didn't crash into the Sun like the other recent ones.
More info from same page;
Interestingly, a much smaller comet that preceded this one can be seen about half a day earlier on just about the identical route. And another pair of small comets followed the same track into the Sun after the bright one. Such a string of comets has never been witnessed before by SOHO. SOHO's C3 coronagraph instrument blocks out the Sun with an occulting disk; the white circle represents the size of the Sun. The planet Mercury can also be seen moving from right to left just beneath the Sun.
As far as the CME's go, I'm starting to wonder if there isn't an electrical charge that induces the CME. But then again, there are CME's when no comets are visible, too.
Thanks to SOHO, we do see a great many more small comets which had previously gone undetected.
The EIT 284 product shows them the best, to my own untrained eyes. EIT 284 latest image