Comets.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Other Objects in the Solar System
Advertisements

Section 4: Asteroids, Comets, and Meteoroids
Unt4: asteroid part 2. Comets Comet Ikeya-Seki in the dawn sky in 1965.
A comet is a small Solar System body that orbits the Sun and, when close enough to the Sun, exhibits a visible coma (atmosphere) or a tail — both primarily.
Comets By: Kaya Umeda, Cierra Yoshikawa. What is a Comet? Small, icy celestial body that orbits around the sun.
Comets, Asteroids, and Meteors
Extreme Navigation NASA’s Discovery Missions: Stardust-NExT and EPOXI Missions NASA’s Discovery Missions: Stardust-NExT
Comets Dirty Snowballs? Not Really. Comet Hyukatake.
Unit 47 Comets Copyright (c) The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Comets May 7, 2004 Icy bodies left over from formation of Solar System Possibly brought water & organic material to early Earth.
Section 4: Asteroids, Comets, and Meteoroids
Copyright © by Holt, Rinehart and Winston. All rights reserved. ResourcesChapter menu Chapter 4 Chapter 4 Section 5 Small Bodies in the Solar System.
Gravitational Force Every mass exerts a force on Every mass exerts a force on every other mass. every other mass.
Comets Astronomy 311 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 22.
Comets Astronomy 311 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 22.
Comets Astronomy 311 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 22.
Comets Jeopardy. Comet Facts Famous Comets Rendezvous Vocabulary
Ch Asteroids, Comets, & Meteoroids
Astronomy Science vocabulary:
Section 5: Comets, Asteroids, and Meteors. Comets The word "comet" comes from the Greek word for "hair.“ Our ancestors thought comets were stars with.
Comets, Meteors and Asteroids. Astronomical Units (AU) and Light-Years (ly) ( AU and light years are both measurements of distance, generally used to.
Moon, Comets, Meteors, & Asteroids!. Asteroids What are asteroids? a) The broken up remnants of a destroyed planet? b) Material that never managed to.
BY: IAN + SHAE. What is a Comet? Small solar system body Small solar system body Displays coma (a thin, fuzzy, temporary atmosphere) when close enough.
The Outer Planets. Jupiter Jupiter – fifth planet from the sun, largest in the solar system – Atmosphere – primarily hydrogen and helium Below atmosphere,
Chapter 3 Solar System Section 4 Asteroids, Comets and Meteoroids Notes 3-6.
Section 4 Minor Members of the Solar System
Solar System Formation  Interstellar Cloud Collapses This cloud is called a nebula This cloud is called a nebula Contains Hydrogen (92%), Helium (7%)
Section 28.4 Asteroids, Comets and Meteoroids
1 Ch. 23: “Touring Our Solar System” 23.4: “Minor Members of the Solar System”
Comets, Asteroids, Meteoroid and Meteorites Chapter 21 Section 5 Pages
1. Amor asteroid -an asteroid whose orbit crosses the orbit of Mars.
Other objects in the Solar System Comets, asteroids, and more.
Comets, Meteoroids and Asteroids
Comets, Meteors and Meteorites. Other objects in Solar System Asteroids in orbit between Mars and Jupiter. Comets (in highly eccentric orbits). Meteors.
Bell work Have scientists ever brought extraterrestrial material to Earth? Scientists have studied rocks from Mars and other parts of the solar system.
Comets and Meteors. Comets Large, icy dirt-ball Contains dust, ice, carbon dioxide, ammonia, methane and more Most comets ~ 16km across.
Chapter 23 Section 4 Minor Members of Our Solar System
Comets Comets Hale-Bopp and the Andromeda galaxy.
Solar System “Fluff” Pt. 2 The fluffier fluff.. Comets. Snowballs of DOOM!!!
Comets and Asteroids I. Comets A. What is a Comet?: It is a small body orbiting the Sun that develops a ______ (a fuzzy atmosphere) and/or a ____ as it.
The Solar System Inner and Outer Planets
Meteors, Asteroids, & Comets (Chapter 19) Comet Lovejoy 2015 Image Credit: Sky & Telescope.
Solar System “Fluff” Pt. 2 The fluffier fluff.. Comets. Snowballs of DOOM!!!
Phil Plait Talk
Comets. The Kuiper Belt Many Plutoids and smaller icy planetismals or “cometary bodies” orbit close to the same plane as the planets forming a “belt”
Comets, Asteroids, and Meteoroids Section Comets Loose collections of ice, dust, and small rocky particles whose orbits are usually very long, narrow.
What they are Where the are They and Us.  Comet – A body that produces a coma of gas and dust; a small, icy body that orbits the Sun  Made of ice and.
C o m e t s a r e m a d e o f d u s t a n d i c e. C o m e t s o f t e n c o m e f r o m : t h e K u i p e r b e l t o r t h e O o r t c l o u d. C o.
Asteroids,, Comets, and Meteoroids Chapter 5. Bode’s Law In 1772 Johann Bode, a German astronomer, created a mathematical formula now called Bode’s Law.
Bodies in the solar system that orbit the Sun. Typically made of rock and metal but can also contain organic compounds.
Other Solar System Bodies next right hand side Key Point (8-4.1): Summarize the characteristics and movements of objects in the solar system.
Comets, Asteroids, and Meteors
Minor Members of the Solar System Asteroids, Comets, Meteors…
Orbits & Objects in Space. An orbit is a regular, repeating path that one object in space takes around another one. An object in an orbit is called a.
Chapter 23 Solar System Section 3 Asteroids, Comets and Meteoroids Notes 23-5.
Challenger Learning Center. Challenger Tragedy Francis Scobee, Michael Smith, Ronald McNair, Ellison Onizuka, Judith Resnik, Gregory Jarvis, and Christa.
Asteroids Cristal Locke Catch a falling star!.
Bodies in the solar system; orbit the Sun.
Comets, Asteroids, and Meteors
Comets, Asteroids, Meteoroid and Meteorites
Bodies in the solar system that orbit the Sun.
TEACHER NOTES coma - The roughly spherical blob of gas that surrounds the nucleus of a comet; it is about a million km across. The coma is comprised of.
The View From Earth.
Comets, Asteroids, and Meteors – Copyright by Mr. K.
Other Objects in Our Solar System
Comets.
Comets.
Minor Members of the Solar System
Comets, Asteroids, Meteoroid and Meteorites
Comets.
Presentation transcript:

Comets

A comet is a small, icy celestial body that orbits around the Sun. Made up of a nucleus (solid, frozen ice, gas and dust), A gaseous coma (water vapor, CO2, and other gases) And a long tail (made of dust and ionized gases).

Comet’s Tail Develops only when the comet is near the Sun. Its long ion tail of always points away from the Sun, due to the force of the solar wind. The tail can be up to 250 million km long, and is most of what we see. Comets are only visible when they're near the Sun in their highly eccentric orbits.

Famous Comets #1 - Comet Halley Most famous comet till date. Named after British astronomer Edmund Halley, this comet was seen in 1531 and 1607. According to his observations, every time it approaches the Sun, its 15-km nucleus drops about 6 m of ice and rock into space. This results in the formation of an orbiting trail, which, when it falls on Earth, is called Orionids meteor shower. It is anticipated that Comet Halley will return to the inner Solar System in 2061.

Famous Comets #2 - Comet Hyakutake Comet Hyakutake was discovered by an Japanese astronomer - Yuji Hyakutake. The scientist observed it on January 30, 1996, with the help of a pair of binoculars. The comet seemed to be small and bright, with the longest tail ever observed. According to the calculations done by astronomers, the orbit of Comet Hyakutake will not bring it near the sun again for next 14000 years.

Famous Comets #3 - Comet Swift-Tuttle American astronomers Lewis Swift and Horace Tuttle discovered Comet Swift-Tuttle in July 1862. According to their observations, as this comet moves nearer to the Sun in every 120 years, a trail of dust debris is left behind, which provides the ingredients for a spectacular fireworks display seen in July and August. Scientists predict that this comet will collide with Earth one day, because the two orbits closely intercept each other.

Famous Comets # 4 - Comet Hale Bopp Alan Hale of New Mexico and Thomas Bopp of Arizona, discovered it on July 23, 1995 just outside Jupiter's orbit. It was carefully analyzed using Hubble Space Telescope. Hale-Bopp comet is famous for holding a record for the longest period of naked-eye visibility. It is predicted that this comet will not appear in another 2400 years.

Ion Tail: A tail of charged gases (ions) always faces away from the sun because the solar wind (ions streaming from the sun at high velocities) pushes it away (it is also called the plasma tail). When the comet is approaching the Sun, the ion tail trails the comet: when the comet is leaving of the Sun, the ion tail leads. The tail fades as the comet moves far from the Sun. The ion tail can be well over 100 million km long.

Dust Tail: The dust tail is a long, wide tail composed of microscopic dust particles that are buffeted by photons emitted from the Sun This tail curves slightly due to the comet's motion. The tail fades as the comet moves far from the Sun.

Nucleus: The nucleus is the frozen center of a comet's head. It is composed of ice, gas, and dust. The nucleus contains most of the comet's mass but is very small (about 1 to 10 km across - or more).

Coma: The coma is the roughly spherical blob of gas that surrounds the nucleus of a comet It is about a million km across. The coma is made of water vapor, carbon dioxide gas, ammonia, dust, and neutral gases that have sublimed from the solid nucleus. The coma and the nucleus form the head of a comet.

Hydrogen Envelope: Hydrogen gas surrounds the coma of the comet and trails along for millions of miles (it is usually between the ion tail and the dust tail). The hydrogen envelope is about 10 million km across at the nucleus of the comet and about 100 million km long. It is bigger when the comet is near the Sun.