Dictionary Definition
comet n : (astronomy) a relatively small
extraterrestrial body consisting of a frozen mass that travels
around the sun in a highly elliptical orbit
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- /ˈkɒmət/
- /"kQm@t/
- Rhymes: -ɒmɪt
Etymology
From comete (French: comète), from cometa, from κομήτης (kometes) "longhaired", referring to the tail of a comet, from κόμη (kome) "hair".Noun
- A celestial body consisting mainly of ice, dust and gas in an (usually very eccentric) orbit around the Sun and having a "tail" of matter blown back from it by the solar wind as it approaches the Sun.
- A celestial phenomenon with the appearance given by the orbiting celestial body.
Derived terms
Related terms
Translations
a celestial body, generally with a tail
- Arabic: (muðánnab)
- Bosnian: kometa
- Breton: steredenn-lostek
- Bulgarian: комета (kométa)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 彗星
(huìxīng)
- Min Nan:
-
- (tng-bóe-chheⁿ
or
tng-bóe-chhiⁿ)
- (sàu-chhiú-chheⁿ or sàu-chhiú-chhiⁿ)
- 彗星 (hūi-chheⁿ, hūi-chhiⁿ, hūi-seng)
- (sàu-chhiú-chheⁿ or sàu-chhiú-chhiⁿ)
- (tng-bóe-chheⁿ
or
tng-bóe-chhiⁿ)
- Mandarin: 彗星
(huìxīng)
- Czech: kometa
- Dutch: komeet
- Esperanto: kometo
- Finnish: komeetta (scientific), pyrstötähti (old, colloquial)
- French: comète
- German: Komet
- Hebrew: שביט (shavyt')
- Ido: kometo
- Indonesian: komet
- Interlingua: cometa
- Italian: cometa
- Japanese: 彗星 (すいせい, suiséi)
- Latin: cometes
- Lithuanian: kometa
- Maltese: kometa
- Polish: kometa
- Portuguese: cometa
- Russian: комета (kométa)
- Serbian:
- Sindhi: (puchhurru taarow)
- Slovene: komet
- Spanish: cometa
- Swedish: komet
- Telugu: తోకచుక్క (toekachukka)
- Vietnamese: sao chổi
Extensive Definition
Comets are small Solar System
bodies that orbit the Sun and, when close
enough to the Sun, exhibit a visible coma (or
atmosphere) and/or a tail — both primarily from the
effects of solar radiation upon the comet's nucleus.
Comet nuclei are themselves loose collections of ice, dust and
small rocky particles, measuring a few kilometres or tens of
kilometres across.
Comets have a variety of different orbital
periods, ranging from a few years, to hundreds of thousands of
years, while some are believed to pass through the inner Solar
System only once before being thrown out into interstellar space.
Short-period comets are thought to originate in the Kuiper Belt,
or associated scattered
disc, which lie beyond the orbit of Neptune.
Long-period comets are believed to originate at a very much greater
distance from the Sun, in a cloud (the Oort cloud)
consisting of debris left over from the condensation of the
solar
nebula. Comets are thrown from these outer reaches of the Solar
System inwards towards the Sun by gravitational perturbations from
the outer planets (in the case of Kuiper Belt objects) or nearby
stars (in the case of Oort Cloud objects), or as a result of
collisions. Comets leave a trail of debris behind them. If the
comet's path crosses Earth's path, then at that point may be meteor
showers as the Earth passes through the trail of debris. The
Perseid meteor shower occurs every year between August 9 and 13
when the Earth passes through the orbit of the comet
Swift-Tuttle. Halley's
comet is the source of the Orionid shower in October.
Comets are distinguished from asteroids by the presence of a
coma and/or tail, though very old comets that have lost all their
volatile
materials may come to resemble asteroids. Asteroids are also
believed to have a different origin from comets, having formed in
the inner Solar System rather than the outer Solar System. Recent
findings have, however, somewhat blurred the distinction between
asteroids and comets; see also Asteroid:
Terminology.
There are a reported 3,354 known comets as of
November 2007, of which several hundred are short-period. This
number is steadily increasing. However, this represents only a tiny
fraction of the total potential comet population: the reservoir of
comet-like bodies in the outer solar system may number one
trillion. The number of naked-eye comets averages to roughly one
per year, though many of these are faint and unspectacular. When a
historically bright or notable naked-eye comet is witnessed by many
people, it is often considered a Great
comet.
The word "comet" came to the English
language through Latin cometes from
the Greek word
komē, meaning "hair of the head"; Aristotle first
used the derivation komētēs to depict comets as "stars with hair."
The astronomical
symbol for comets () accordingly consists of a disc with a
hairlike tail.
Physical characteristics
Comet nuclei are in a range from 1/2 kilometer to
50 kilometers across and are composed of rock, dust, water ice, and
frozen gases such as carbon
monoxide, carbon
dioxide, methane and
ammonia. They are often
popularly described as "dirty snowballs", though recent
observations have revealed dry dusty or rocky surfaces, suggesting
that the ices are hidden beneath the crust (see
Debate over comet composition). Comets also contain a variety
of organic
compounds; in addition to the gases already mentioned, these
may include methanol,
hydrogen
cyanide, formaldehyde, ethanol and ethane, and perhaps more complex
molecules such as long-chain hydrocarbons and amino acids.
Comet nuclei are irregularly shaped: they have insufficient mass
(and hence gravity) to become spherical.
In the outer
solar system, comets remain frozen and are extremely difficult
or impossible to detect from Earth due to their small size (though
some observations of comet nuclei in the Kuiper Belt have been
made). As a comet approaches the inner
solar system, solar
radiation causes the water, frozen gases and other volatile
materials within the comet to vaporise and stream out of the
nucleus, carrying dust away with them. The streams of dust and gas
thus released form a huge, extremely tenuous atmosphere around the
comet called the coma, and
the force exerted on the coma by the Sun's radiation
pressure and solar wind
cause an enormous tail to form, which points away from the
sun.
The streams of dust and gas each form their own
distinct tail, pointing in slightly different directions. The tail
of dust is left behind in the comet's orbit in such a manner that
it often forms a curved tail. At the same time, the ion tail, made
of gases, always points directly away from the Sun, as this gas is
more strongly affected by the solar wind than is dust, following
magnetic field lines rather than an orbital trajectory. While the
solid nucleus of comets is generally less than 50 km
across, the coma may be larger than the Sun, and ion tails have
been observed to extend 1 astronomical
unit (150 million km) or more.
Both the coma and tail are illuminated by the Sun
and may become visible from Earth when a comet
passes through the inner solar system, the dust reflecting sunlight
directly and the gases glowing from ionisation. Most comets are too
faint to be visible without the aid of a telescope, but a few each
decade become bright enough to be visible with the naked eye.
Occasionally a comet may experience a huge and sudden outburst of
gas and dust, during which the size of the coma temporarily greatly
increases in size. This happened in 2007 to Comet
Holmes.
Surprisingly, cometary nuclei are among the
darkest objects known to
exist in the solar system. The Giotto
probe found that Comet
Halley's nucleus reflects approximately 4% of the light that
falls on it, and Deep Space
1 discovered that Comet
Borrelly's surface reflects only 2.4% to 3% of the light that
falls on it; by comparison, asphalt reflects 7% of the light
that falls on it. It is thought that complex organic compounds are
the dark surface material. Solar heating drives off volatile
compounds leaving behind heavy long-chain organics that tend to be
very dark, like tar or crude
oil. The
very darkness of cometary surfaces allows them to absorb the heat
necessary to drive their outgassing.
In 1996, comets were found to emit X-rays. These X-rays
surprised researchers, because their emission by comets had not
previously been predicted. The X-rays are thought to be generated
by the interaction between comets and the solar wind: when highly
charged ions fly through a
cometary atmosphere, they collide with cometary atoms and
molecules. In these collisions, the ions will capture one or more
electrons leading to emission of X-rays and far ultraviolet
photons.
The fate of comets
Eventually – typically after many
orbits of the Sun – all the volatile material contained
in a comet nucleus evaporates away, and the comet either
disintegrates into a trail of dust or becomes a small, dark, inert
lump of rock or rubble that may come to resemble an asteroid. Comets are also known
to break up into large fragments, as happened with Comet
Schwassmann-Wachmann 3 in 2006. This breakup may be triggered
by tidal gravitational forces from the Sun or a large planet, by an
"explosion" of volatile material, or for other reasons not fully
explained.
Some comets meet a more spectacular end
– either falling into the Sun, or smashing into a planet
or other body. Collisions between comets and planets or moons were
common in the early Solar System: some of the many craters on the
Earth's Moon,
for example, may have been caused by comets. A recent collision of
a comet with a planet occurred in 1994 when Comet
Shoemaker-Levy 9 broke up into pieces and collided with
Jupiter.
Many comets and asteroids collided into Earth in
its early stages. Many scientists believe that comets bombarding
the young Earth (about 4 billion years ago) brought the vast
quantities of water that now fill the Earth's oceans, or at least a
significant proportion of it. But other researchers have cast doubt
on this theory. The detection of organic molecules in comets has
led some to speculate that comets and/or meteorites may have brought
the precursors of life – or even life itself –
to Earth. while others use it to mean exclusively short-period
comets. Similarly, although the literal meaning of non-periodic
comet is the same as single-apparition comet, some use it to mean
all comets that are not "periodic" in the second sense (that is, to
also include all comets with a period greater than 200
years).
- Recently-discovered main-belt comets form a distinct class, orbiting in more circular orbits within the asteroid belt.
Based on their orbital characteristics,
short-period comets are thought to originate in the Kuiper belt
or the scattered
disk Vast swarms of comet-like bodies are believed to orbit the
Sun in these distant regions in roughly circular orbits.
Occasionally the gravitational influence of the outer planets (in
the case of Kuiper Belt objects) or nearby stars (in the case of
Oort cloud objects) may throw one of these bodies into an
elliptical orbit that takes it inwards towards the Sun, to form a visible
comet. Unlike the return of periodic comets whose orbits have been
established by previous observations, the appearance of new comets
by this mechanism is unpredictable.
Since their elliptical orbits frequently take
them close to the giant planets, comets are often subject to
further gravitational perturbations. Short period comets display a
tendency for their aphelia to coincide
with a giant
planet's orbital radius, with the Jupiter family of comets
being the largest, as the histogram shows. It is clear
that comets coming in from the Oort cloud often have their orbits
strongly influenced by the gravity of giant planets as a result of
a close encounter. Jupiter is the source of the greatest
perturbations, being more than twice as massive as all the other
planets combined, in addition to being the swiftest of the giant
planets. These perturbations may sometimes deflect long-period
comets into shorter orbital periods (Halley's
Comet being a possible example).
Early observations have revealed a few genuinely
hyperbolic (i.e. non-periodic) trajectories, but no more than could
be accounted for by perturbations from Jupiter. If comets pervaded
interstellar space, they would be moving with velocities of the
same order as the relative velocities of stars near the Sun (a few
tens of kilometres per second). If such objects entered the solar
system, they would have positive total energies, and would be
observed to have genuinely hyperbolic trajectories. A rough
calculation shows that there might be four hyperbolic comets per
century, within Jupiter's orbit, give or take one and perhaps two
orders of magnitude.
A number of periodic comets discovered in earlier
decades or previous centuries are now "lost." Their orbits were
never known well enough to predict future appearances. However,
occasionally a "new" comet will be discovered and upon calculation
of its orbit it turns out to be an old "lost" comet. An example is
Comet 11P/Tempel-Swift-LINEAR,
discovered in 1869 but unobservable after 1908 because of
perturbations by Jupiter. It was not found again until accidentally
rediscovered by LINEAR in
2001.
Comet nomenclature
The names given to comets have followed several different conventions over the past two centuries. Before any systematic naming convention was adopted, comets were named in a variety of ways. Prior to the early 20th century, most comets were simply referred to by the year in which they appeared, sometimes with additional adjectives for particularly bright comets; thus, the "Great Comet of 1680" (Kirch's Comet), the "Great September Comet of 1882," and the "Daylight Comet of 1910" ("Great January Comet of 1910"). After Edmund Halley demonstrated that the comets of 1531, 1607, and 1682 were the same body and successfully predicted its return in 1759, that comet became known as Comet Halley. Similarly, the second and third known periodic comets, Comet Encke and Comet Biela, were named after the astronomers who calculated their orbits rather than their original discoverers. Later, periodic comets were usually named after their discoverers, but comets that had appeared only once continued to be referred to by the year of their apparition.In the early 20th century, the convention of
naming comets after their discoverers became common, and this
remains so today. A comet is named after up to three independent
discoverers. In recent years, many comets have been discovered by
instruments operated by large teams of astronomers, and in this
case, comets may be named for the instrument. For example, Comet
IRAS-Araki-Alcock was discovered independently by the IRAS satellite and
amateur astronomers Genichi
Araki and George
Alcock. In the past, when multiple comets were discovered by
the same individual, group of individuals, or team, the comets'
names were distinguished by adding a numeral to the discoverers'
names (but only for periodic comets); thus Comets Shoemaker-Levy
1–9. Today, the
large numbers of comets discovered by some instruments (in August
2005,
SOHO discovered its 1000th comet) has rendered this system
impractical, and no attempt is made to ensure that each comet has a
unique name. Instead, the comets' systematic designations are used
to avoid confusion.
Until 1994, comets were first given a provisional
designation consisting of the year of their discovery followed
by a lowercase letter indicating its order of discovery in that
year (for example, Comet 1969i
(Bennett) was the 9th comet discovered in 1969). Once the comet
had been observed through perihelion and its orbit had been
established, the comet was given a permanent designation of the
year of its perihelion, followed by a
Roman
numeral indicating its order of perihelion passage in that
year, so that Comet 1969i became Comet 1970 II
(it was the second comet to pass perihelion in 1970)
Increasing numbers of comet discoveries made this
procedure awkward, and in 1994 the
International Astronomical Union approved a new naming system.
Comets are now designated by the year of their discovery followed
by a letter indicating the half-month of the discovery and a number
indicating the order of discovery (a system similar to that already
used for asteroids), so
that the fourth comet discovered in the second half of February
2006 would be designated 2006 D4. Prefixes are also added
to indicate the nature of the comet:
- P/ indicates a periodic comet (defined for these purposes as any comet with an orbital period of less than 200 years or confirmed observations at more than one perihelion passage);
- C/ indicates a non-periodic comet (defined as any comet that is not periodic according to the preceding definition);
- X/ indicates a comet for which no reliable orbit could be calculated (generally, historical comets);
- D/ indicates a comet which has broken up or been lost;
- A/ indicates an object that was mistakenly identified as a comet, but is actually a minor planet.
After their second observed perihelion passage,
periodic comets are also assigned a number indicating the order of
their discovery. So Halley's Comet, the first comet to be
identified as periodic, has the systematic designation 1P/1682 Q1.
Comet
Hale-Bopp's designation is C/1995 O1. Comets which first
received a minor planet designation keep the latter, which leads to
some odd names such as (Catalina-LINEAR).
There are only five objects that are cross-listed
as both comets and asteroids: 2060 Chiron
(95P/Chiron),
4015
Wilson-Harrington (107P/Wilson-Harrington),
7968
Elst-Pizarro (133P/Elst-Pizarro),
60558
Echeclus (174P/Echeclus),
and 118401
LINEAR (176P/LINEAR
(LINEAR 52)).
History of comet study
Early observations and thought
Before the invention of the telescope, comets
seemed to appear out of nowhere in the sky and gradually vanish out
of sight. They were usually considered bad omens of deaths of kings or noble
men, or coming catastrophes, or even interpreted as attacks by
heavenly beings against terrestrial inhabitants. From ancient
sources, such as Chinese oracle bones,
it is known that their appearances have been noticed by humans for
millennia. Some authorities interpret references to "falling stars"
in Gilgamesh, the
Book of
Revelation and the Book of
Enoch as references to comets, or possibly bolides.
In the first book of his Meteorology,
Aristotle
propounded the view of comets that would hold sway in Western
thought for nearly two thousand years. He rejected the ideas of
several earlier philosophers that comets were planets, or at least a phenomenon
related to the planets, on the grounds that while the planets
confined their motion to the circle of the Zodiac, comets could
appear in any part of the sky. Instead, he described comets as a
phenomenon of the upper atmosphere,
where hot, dry exhalations gathered and occasionally burst into
flame. Aristotle held this mechanism responsible for not only
comets, but also meteors,
the aurora
borealis, and even the Milky
Way.
A few later classical philosophers did dispute
this view of comets. Seneca
the Younger, in his Natural
Questions, observed that comets moved regularly through the sky
and were undisturbed by the wind, behavior more typical of
celestial than atmospheric phenomena. While he conceded that the
other planets do not appear outside the Zodiac, he saw no reason
that a planet-like object could not move through any part of the
sky, humanity's knowledge of celestial things being very limited.
However, the Aristotelian viewpoint proved more influential, and it
was not until the 16th century that it was demonstrated that comets
must exist outside the earth's atmosphere.
One very famous old recording of a comet is the
appearance of Halley's
Comet on the Bayeux
Tapestry, which records the Norman
conquest of England in AD
1066.
In 1577, a bright comet was visible for several
months. The Danish astronomer Tycho Brahe
used measurements of the comet's position taken by himself and
other, geographically separated, observers to determine that the
comet had no measurable parallax. Within the precision
of the measurements, this implied the comet must be at least four
times more distant from the earth than the moon.
Orbital studies
Although comets had now been demonstrated to be
in the heavens, the question of how they moved through the heavens
would be debated for most of the next century. Even after Johannes
Kepler had determined in 1609 that the planets moved about the
sun in elliptical
orbits, he was reluctant to believe that the
laws that governed the motions of the planets should also
influence the motion of other bodies—he believed that comets travel
among the planets along straight lines. Galileo
Galilei, although a staunch Copernicanist,
rejected Tycho's parallax measurements and held to the Aristotelian
notion of comets moving on straight lines through the upper
atmosphere.
The first suggestion that Kepler's laws of
planetary motion should also apply to the comets was made by
William
Lower in 1610.
In 1705, Edmond
Halley applied Newton's method to twenty-four cometary
apparitions that had occurred between 1337 and 1698. He noted that
three of these, the comets of 1531, 1607, and 1682, had very
similar orbital
elements, and he was further able to account for the slight
differences in their orbits in terms of gravitational perturbation
by Jupiter
and Saturn.
Confident that these three apparitions had been three appearances
of the same comet, he predicted that it would appear again in
1758–9. (Earlier, Robert Hooke had identified the comet of 1664
with that of 1618, while Jean-Dominique Cassini had suspected the
identity of the comets of 1577, 1665, and 1680. Both were
incorrect.) Halley's predicted return date was later refined by a
team of three French
mathematicians: Alexis
Clairaut, Joseph
Lalande, and Nicole-Reine
Lepaute, who predicted the date of the comet's 1759 perihelion
to within one month's accuracy. When the comet returned as
predicted, it became known as Comet Halley
or Halley's Comet (its official designation is 1P/Halley). Its next
appearance will be in 2061.
Among the comets with short enough periods to
have been observed several times in the historical record, Comet
Halley is unique in consistently being bright enough to be visible
to the naked eye. Since the confirmation of Comet Halley's
periodicity, many other periodic comets have been discovered
through the telescope.
The second comet to be discovered to have a periodic orbit was
Comet
Encke (official designation 2P/Encke). Over the period
1819–1821 the German
mathematician and physicist Johann
Franz Encke computed orbits for a series of cometary
apparitions observed in 1786, 1795, 1805, and 1818, concluded that
they were same comet, and successfully predicted its return in
1822. In 1836, the German mathematician Friedrich
Wilhelm Bessel, after observing streams of vapor in the 1835
apparition of Comet Halley, proposed that the jet forces of
evaporating material could be great enough to significantly alter a
comet's orbit and argued that the non-gravitational movements of
Comet
Encke resulted from this mechanism.
However, another comet-related discovery
overshadowed these ideas for nearly a century. Over the period
1864–1866 the Italian astronomer
Giovanni
Schiaparelli computed the orbit of the Perseid meteors, and based on orbital
similarities, correctly hypothesized that the Perseids were
fragments of Comet
Swift-Tuttle. The link between comets and meteor showers was
dramatically underscored when in 1872, a major meteor shower
occurred from the orbit of Comet Biela,
which had been observed to split into two pieces during its 1846
apparition, and was never seen again after 1852. This "dirty
snowball" model soon became accepted. It was confirmed when an
armada of spacecraft
(including the European
Space Agency's Giotto
probe and the Soviet
Union's Vega 1 and
Vega 2)
flew through the coma of Halley's comet in 1986 to photograph the
nucleus and observed the jets of evaporating material. The American
probe Deep Space
1 flew past the nucleus of Comet Borrelly
on September 21
2001 and
confirmed that the characteristics of Comet Halley are common on
other comets as well.
Although comets formed in the outer Solar System,
radial mixing of material during the early formation of the Solar
System is thought to have redistributed material throughout the
proto-planetary disk, so comets also contain crystalline grains
which were formed in the hot inner Solar System. This is seen in
comet spectra as well as in sample return missions.
The Stardust
spacecraft, launched in February 1999, collected particles from the
coma of Comet
Wild 2 in January 2004, and returned the samples to Earth in a
capsule in January 2006. Claudia Alexander, a program scientist for
Rosetta from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory who has modeled
comets for years, reported to space.com about her astonishment at
the number of jets, their appearance on the dark side of the comet
as well as on the light side, their ability to lift large chunks of
rock from the surface of the comet and the fact that comet Wild 2
is not a loosely-cemented rubble pile.
Forthcoming space missions will add greater
detail to our understanding of what comets are made of. In July
2005, the
Deep Impact probe blasted a crater on Comet Tempel 1 to
study its interior. And in 2014, the European Rosetta
probe will orbit comet Comet
Churyumov-Gerasimenko and place a small lander on its
surface.
Rosetta observed the Deep Impact event, and with
its set of very sensitive instruments for cometary investigations,
it used its capabilities to observe Tempel 1 before, during and
after the impact. At a distance of about 80 million kilometres from
the comet, Rosetta was the only spacecraft other than Deep Impact
itself to view the comet.
Debate over comet composition
Debate continues about how much ice is in a comet. In 2001, NASA's Deep Space 1 team, working at NASA's Jet Propulsion Lab, obtained high-resolution images of the surface of Comet Borrelly. They announced that comet Borrelly exhibits distinct jets, yet has a hot, dry surface. The assumption that comets contain water and other ices led Dr. Laurence Soderblom of the U.S. Geological Survey to say, "The spectrum suggests that the surface is hot and dry. It is surprising that we saw no traces of water ice." However, he goes on to suggest that the ice is probably hidden below the crust as "either the surface has been dried out by solar heating and maturation or perhaps the very dark soot-like material that covers Borrelly's surface masks any trace of surface ice".The recent
Deep Impact probe has also yielded results suggesting that the
majority of a comet's water ice is below the surface, and that
these reservoirs feed the jets of vaporised water that form the
coma of Tempel 1.
However, more recent data from the Stardust
mission show that materials retrieved from the tail of comet
Wild 2
were crystalline and could only have been "born in fire." More
recent still, the materials retrieved demonstrate that the "comet
dust resembles asteroid materials." These new results have forced a
rethink about the very nature of comets and their distinction from
asteroids.
Notable comets
Great comets
While hundreds of tiny comets pass through the
inner solar system every year, very few are noticed by the general
public. About every decade or so, a comet will become bright enough
to be noticed by a casual observer — such comets are often
designated Great Comets.
In times past, bright comets often inspired panic and hysteria in
the general population, being thought of as bad omens. More
recently, during the passage of Halley's
Comet in 1910, the Earth passed through the comet's tail, and
erroneous newspaper reports inspired a fear that cyanogen in the tail might
poison millions, while the appearance of Comet
Hale-Bopp in 1997 triggered the mass suicide of the Heaven's
Gate cult. To most people, however, a great comet is simply a
beautiful spectacle.
Predicting whether a comet will become a great
comet is notoriously difficult, as many factors may cause a comet's
brightness to depart drastically from predictions. Broadly
speaking, if a comet has a large and active nucleus, will pass
close to the Sun, and is not obscured by the Sun as seen from the
Earth when at its brightest, it will have a chance of becoming a
great comet. However, Comet
Kohoutek in 1973 fulfilled all the criteria and was expected to
become spectacular, but failed to do so. Comet West,
which appeared three years later, had much lower expectations
(perhaps because scientists were much warier of glowing predictions
after the Kohoutek fiasco), but became an extremely impressive
comet.
The late 20th century saw a lengthy gap without
the appearance of any great comets, followed by the arrival of two
in quick succession — Comet
Hyakutake in 1996, followed by Hale-Bopp, which reached maximum
brightness in 1997 having been discovered two years earlier. The
first great comet of the 21st century was Comet McNaught,
which became visible to naked eye observers in January 2007. It was
the brightest in over 40 years.
Sungrazing comets
A Sungrazing comet is a comet that passes
extremely close to the Sun at perihelion, sometimes within a few
thousand kilometres of the Sun's surface. While small sungrazers
can be completely evaporated during such a close approach to the
Sun, larger
sungrazers can survive many perihelion passages. However,
the strong tidal forces
they experience often lead to their fragmentation.
About 90% of the sungrazers observed with
SOHO are members of the Kreutz
group, which all originate from one giant comet that broke up
into many smaller comets during its first passage through the
inner
solar system. The other 10% contains some sporadic sungrazers,
but four other related groups of comets have been identified among
them: the Kracht, Kracht 2a, Marsden and Meyer groups. The Marsden
and Kracht groups both appear to be related to Comet
96P/Machholz, which is also the parent of two meteor
streams, the Quadrantids and
the Arietids.
Unusual comets
Of the thousands of known comets, some are very unusual. Comet Encke orbits from outside the main asteroid belt to inside the orbit of Mercury while Comet 29P/Schwassmann-Wachmann travels in a nearly circular orbit entirely between Jupiter and Saturn. 2060 Chiron, whose unstable orbit keeps it between Saturn and Uranus, was originally classified as an asteroid until a faint coma was noticed. Similarly, Comet Shoemaker-Levy 2 was originally designated asteroid . Roughly six percent of the near-earth asteroids are thought to be extinct nuclei of comets which no longer experience outgassing.Some comets have been observed to break up during
their perihelion passage, including great comets West and
Ikeya-Seki.
Comet
Biela was one significant example, breaking into two during its
1846 perihelion passage. The two comets were seen separately in
1852, but never again afterward. Instead, spectacular meteor
showers were seen in 1872 and 1885 when the comet should have
been visible. A lesser meteor shower, the Andromedids,
occurs annually in November, and is caused by the Earth crossing
Biela's orbit.
Another significant cometary disruption was that
of Comet
Shoemaker-Levy 9, which was discovered in 1993. At the time of
its discovery, the comet was in orbit around Jupiter, having been
captured by the planet during a very close approach in 1992. This
close approach had already broken the comet into hundreds of
pieces, and over a period of 6 days in July 1994, these pieces
slammed into Jupiter's atmosphere — the first time astronomers had
observed a collision between two objects in the solar system. It
has also been suggested that the object likely to have been
responsible for the Tunguska
event in 1908 was a fragment of Comet Encke.
Observation
A new comet may be discovered photographically
using a wide-field telescope or visually with
binoculars. However,
even without access to optical equipment, it is still possible for
the amateur astronomer to discover a Sun-grazing comet online by
downloading images accumulated by some satellite observatories such
as
SOHO.
Comets visible to the naked eye are fairly
infrequent, but comets that put on fine displays in amateur class
telescopes (50 mm to 100 cm) occur fairly often
— as often as several times a year, occasionally with
more than one in the sky at the same time. Commonly available
astronomical software will plot the orbits of these known comets.
They are fast compared to other objects in the sky, but their
movement is usually subtle in the eyepiece of a telescope. However,
from night to night, they can move several degrees, which is why
observers find it useful to have a sky chart such as the one in the
adjoining illustration.
The type of display presented by the comet
depends on its composition and how close it comes to the sun.
Because the volatility of a comet's material decreases as it gets
further from the sun, the comet becomes increasingly difficult to
observe as a function of not only distance, but the progressive
shrinking and eventual disappearance of its tail and the reflective
elements it carries. Comets are most interesting when their nucleus
is bright and they display a long tail, which to be seen sometimes
requires a large field of view best provided by smaller telescopes.
Therefore, large amateur instruments (apertures of 25 cm
or larger) that have fainter light grasp do not necessarily confer
an advantage in terms of viewing comets. The opportunity to view
spectacular comets with relatively small aperture instruments in
the 8 cm to 15 cm range is more frequent than
might be guessed from the relatively rare attention they get in the
mainstream press.
Currently visible comets
Comet C/2007 W1
(Boattini), discovered November 28, 2007 by Andrea
Boattini (Mt Lemmon Survey), is as of mid May 2008 at about
magnitude +6, potentially visible to the naked eye in the early
evening sky in the constellation Pyxis. It will be
lost in sunglow through June but reappears as a morning object in
July at a predicted peak of +4. Perigee will be 24 June 2008.
Further Reading
Schechner, Sara J. Comets, Popular Culture, and the Birth of Modern Cosmology. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. 1997.External links
- Comet C/2001 RX14 (LINEAR) near to galaxy NGC 3726 @ SKY-MAP.ORG, SDSS. Captured on Dec. 14th 2002
- Cometography.com
- David Jewitt overview of the comets
- Comets Page at NASA's Solar System Exploration
- ESSAY ON COMETS, which gained the first of Dr. Fellowes's prizes, proposed to those who had attended the University of Edinburgh within the last twelve years. By David Milne. Publisher: Edinburgh, Printed for A. Black; 1828. (a searchable facsimile at the University of Georgia Libraries; DjVu & layered PDF format)
- Everything you wanted to know about comets and asteroids — Provided by New Scientist.
- Listing of newly discovered comets
- Seiichi Yoshida's Comet Information website
- Source of useful comet-related material on the Web
- Animation and static graphics of current and past comets
- The Starry Mirror - Comet News
- Comets Astronomy Cast episode #19, includes full transcript.
comet in Tosk Albanian: Komet
comet in Arabic: مذنب
comet in Asturian: Cometa
comet in Bengali: ধূমকেতু
comet in Min Nan: Tn̂g-boé-chheⁿ
comet in Belarusian: Камета
comet in Belarusian (Tarashkevitsa):
Камэта
comet in Bosnian: Kometa
comet in Bulgarian: Комета
comet in Catalan: Cometa
comet in Chuvash: Комета
comet in Czech: Kometa
comet in Welsh: Comed
comet in Danish: Komet
comet in German: Komet
comet in Dhivehi: މަދުނަބު
comet in Estonian: Komeet
comet in Modern Greek (1453-): Κομήτης
comet in Spanish: Cometa
comet in Esperanto: Kometo
comet in Basque: Kometa espazial
comet in Persian: ستاره دنبالهدار
comet in French: Comète
comet in Friulian: Comete
comet in Irish: Cóiméad
comet in Scottish Gaelic: Reul earballach
comet in Galician: Cometa
comet in Gujarati: ધૂમકેતુ
comet in Korean: 혜성
comet in Hindi: धूमकेतु
comet in Croatian: Komet
comet in Ido: Kometo
comet in Indonesian: Komet
comet in Interlingua (International Auxiliary
Language Association): Cometa
comet in Icelandic: Halastjarna
comet in Italian: Cometa
comet in Hebrew: שביט
comet in Javanese: Komet
comet in Pampanga: Kometa
comet in Kannada: ಧೂಮಕೇತು
comet in Georgian: კომეტა
comet in Swahili (macrolanguage):
Nyotamkia
comet in Latin: Cometes
comet in Latvian: Komēta
comet in Luxembourgish: Koméit
comet in Lithuanian: Kometa
comet in Hungarian: Üstökös
comet in Macedonian: Комета
comet in Malayalam: ധൂമകേതു
comet in Maltese: Kometa
comet in Marathi: धूमकेतू
comet in Malay (macrolanguage):
Komet
nah:Cītlalin
popōca
comet in Dutch: Komeet
comet in Newari: धूम्रकेतू
comet in Japanese: 彗星
comet in Norwegian: Komet
comet in Norwegian Nynorsk: Komet
comet in Narom: Conmète
comet in Novial: Komete
comet in Polish: Kometa
comet in Portuguese: Cometa
comet in Kölsch: Komet
comet in Romanian: Cometă
comet in Quechua: Aquchinchay
comet in Russian: Комета
comet in Sicilian: Cumeta
comet in Simple English: Comet
comet in Slovak: Kométa
comet in Slovenian: Komet
comet in Serbian: Комета
comet in Serbo-Croatian: Kometa
comet in Saterfriesisch: Komete
comet in Sundanese: Komét
comet in Finnish: Komeetta
comet in Swedish: Komet
comet in Tamil: வால்வெள்ளி
comet in Telugu: తోకచుక్క
comet in Thai: ดาวหาง
comet in Vietnamese: Sao chổi
comet in Tajik: Комета
comet in Turkish: Kuyruklu yıldız
comet in Ukrainian: Комета
comet in Urdu: دم دار سیارے
comet in Venetian: Cometa
comet in Yiddish: קאמעט
comet in Chinese: 彗星