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Comets Astronomy 311 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 22
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Upcoming Quiz #3 on Monday, Nov 6 Covers Gas Giants through The Sun Final exam Monday Nov 13, 3pm Covers entire course Observing project due next Friday, Nov 10
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Comets Throughout History People throughout history have observed the passing of comets Comets have been thought to be bad omens and harbingers of doom “When beggars die, there are no comets seen; The heavens themselves blaze forth the death of princes.” --Julius Caesar, Act II, Scene II
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Edmund Halley
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Comet Halley Around 1700 Edmund Halley was studying the records of a comet that seemed to reappear at regular intervals He used Newton’s new laws to determine its orbit (P=76 years so A=18 AU) In 1758 the comet returned just as Halley predicted He was the first to realize that comets are solar system objects on highly elliptical orbits Comet Halley will return again in 2062
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Comet Halley in 1986
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What is a Comet? A comet is an icy planetesimal left over from the formation of the solar system Comets have highly elliptical orbits which bring them into the inner solar system The solar heat and the solar wind create a highly visible cloud and tail of material
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Finding Comets Comets are quite faint and hard to see when they are far from the Sun Large observatories do not have time to spend looking for them Comets are generally found by amateur astronomers If you see a faint fuzzy patch in the sky with your telescope, that is a good candidate for a new comet Comets are generally named after their discoverers, e. g. Comet Hale-Bopp More and more comets are being found by automated observatories
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Comet Hale-Bopp in 1997
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Comet Hale-Bopp
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Comet C/1999 S4 (LINEAR) from Augustana
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Observing a Comet When we look at a comet with our eyes (or a small telescope) we see: Coma: A sphere of glowing gas and particles about 1 million km in diameter Tail: Long streamer of gas and particles that can be more than 100 million km long
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Structure of a Comet
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Comet Tails The tail is the most visible and most dramatic part of a comet A comet generally has 2 tails: Ion Tail (blue) Composed of ions swept off the comet by the solar wind Always points away from the Sun Dust Tail (yellow) Composed of dust particles swept up by light pressure Points roughly away from the Sun, but is curved back towards the Sun by gravity
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The 2 Tails of Comet Halley
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The Two Tails of a Comet
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The Heart of the Comet At the center of the comet is the nucleus This is what the comet looks like far from the Sun and is the source of the tail and the coma Size: ~10 km Composed of rock and ice
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The Nucleus of Comet Halley
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Comet Borrelly from DS1
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Deep Impact Hits Temple
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Stardust Fly-by of Wilt 2
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Comet Jets When the comet is far from the Sun it has no tail or coma The heat from the Sun boils off material The material of the comet is well mixed Sometimes volatiles boil inside the comet and are released as a jet These jets can change a comet’s orbit Comet orbits cannot be strictly predicted by Newton’s laws
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Outgassing From Borrelly
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Jets on Hale-Bopp
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Comet Composition A comet is a mixture of ice and rock “dirty snowball” Comets are composed of: Silicates (rock) Water (ice) Carbon Dioxide (“dry ice”) Ammonia Organic material Comets contain many carbon compounds including C 2, CH, CN (cyanogen)
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Comet Orbits Comets have highly elliptical orbits that bring them close to the Sun and then back to the Kuiper Belt or Oort Cloud Comets get these orbits from a gravitational encounter with a planet or another comet Short period comet orbits are constantly being altered by Jupiter and Saturn
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Meteor Showers As the comet circles the Sun its orbit fills up with lost material Mostly small dust and ice grains When the Earth passes through this material we get a meteor shower Meteor showers are annual events Meteors are small dust particles and thus burn up before they reach the ground
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Anatomy of a Meteor Shower
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The Perseid Meteor Shower Occur every year around August 12 It is warm out, so people are more likely to observe it Get about 50 meteors per hour One of the best meteor showers Meteors appear to come from the direction of the constellation Perseus The Perseids are debris from Comet Swift- Tuttle
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Comet Impacts Comet impacts were probably common in the early solar system and still happen today Example: Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 and Jupiter Many of the craters that we see on the Moon and other bodies may have been made by comets Impacting comets larger than about 1-2 km would cause global climate change and mass extinctions
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Comet Impact on Ganymede
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Comet Deliveries Many comets have impacted the inner planets (especially during the heavy bombardment period) Comets could be a source of volatiles, including water Comets are a means of bringing volatiles from the outer to the inner solar system Could the Earth’s water have come from comets?
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Death of a Comet At each passage, the comet loses material The material in the coma and tails is swept away and lost Eventually all the volatiles will boil off After several more passes Comet Halley will become a piece of rock on a highly elliptical orbit and will not be visible from Earth Comets can also hit a planet or be ejected from the solar system in a close encounter
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Fragmentation of a Comet
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Break-up of Comet LINEAR S4
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Spacecraft Studying Comets Imaging Giotto (1985) -- took close-up pictures of Comet Halley in 1986 Gathering Stardust (1999) -- gather (Jan 2004) and return (2006) a sample of the coma of Comet Wild 2 Impacting Deep Impact (2004) – blasted a 25m deep crater into Comet Temple (2005) Landing Rosetta (2004) -- will land a probe on the nucleus of Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko (2014) It is hard to get close to a comet due to all the dust particles around it
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Summary Comets are small (10 km) bodies that have highly elliptical orbits that originate in the Kuiper belt or Oort cloud The Sun boils off material making the comet visible Comets can produce meteor showers and large impacts
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Summary: Comet Structure Nucleus: small (10km) core that is the source of the comet material Coma: large (~1 million km) cloud of gas around the nucleus Tail: comets have two tails, both pointing away from the Sun: Ion -- pushed by solar wind Dust -- pushed by solar light pressure Jets: gas expelled from the nucleus under pressure
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