Comets 30 October 2015
Introduction The history of comet watching dates back to 1000 BC from the Chinese records and Chaldea, a place in present Iraq. Comets have been regarded as omen, even as recently as –Battle of Hastings – 1066 – Bayeau Tapestry Today Astronomers study Comets from scientific perspectives, and our understanding of these fascinating objects have grown tremendously.
Dirty Snowballs Comets are dusty chunk of ice During each orbit around the sun they partially vaporize Have elliptical Orbits Courtesy: Calvin J. Hamilton
Orbits of Comets Elliptical in Shape Randomly oriented Sun Comet Earth Perihelion distance Aphelion distance
Comet Hunters Comet are named by International Astronomical Union (IAU) after the person who first discovers them. Many comets are discovered by amateur astronomers. Charles Messier, E. E. Bernard, Shoemaker and Levy, Hale and Bopp, Ikeya, Seki and Hayakutake are popular comet hunters.
Origins of Comets Comets are thought to be the left over debris from during the time of formation of the solar system. The elliptical orbits of comets suggest that they underwent gravitational pull from the giant planets. This all lead us to infer two possible locations where comets could start their journey towards the sun: Oort Cloud for long period comets; Kuiper Belt for short period.
Comets Tails Ludwig Biermann propose the idea of solar wind to explain comet tails. Mariner 2 spacecraft captured the one such event in 1962.
Comet Collisions Courtesy: NASA/JPL
Kohoutek
Comet West
Shoemaker-Levy 9
Shoemaker-Levy hits Jupiter
Hale-Bopp Ion tail & Dust tail
Halley from Giotto
Hyakutake
Deep Impact Tempel 1
Comet ISON 4 October 2013
10 April 2013 Comet ISON
8 October 2013
ISON’s path through the sky
ISON approaches the Sun
ISON is only debris cloud after passing Sun
Comet Hartley jets
Comet McNaught 2007
Siding Spring at Mars October 2014
MER PanCam
MAVEN IUVS Siding Spring
Latest Rosetta Images: Landing, 12 Nov 2014 Perihelion: 13 August 2015
Rosetta Target: 67P C-G
Boulder ‘Cheops’
Approaching Perihelion
Outburst in Action
View through Camera 4
P67 Rotation and Regions
Active Pits
Key Concepts Kuiper Belt, exterior to Neptune is the primary source of short period (P<200yr) comets Oort Cloud, 10,000 AU from Sun, reservoir of long period comets, stored there billions of years Small objects much more abundant Cometary activity is triggered by sunlight Comet tails: dust, shaped by solar radiation; ion or plasma tail shaped by solar wind Comet grains: CHON + refractory matter Comet nucleus: dirty snowball