Energy News  
NASA Employs Hubble To Reassure About Comet 73P

Hubble's Advanced Camera for Surveys took this recent set of images of the approaching Comet 73P and its trailing fragments. Image credit: NASA/ESA/JHU-APL/STScI
by Staff Writers
Pasadena CA (SPX) Apr 27, 2006
NASA said Thursday there is no danger that Comet 73P/Schwassmann-Wachmann 3 - or any of its many fragments - will strike Earth during its closest approach next month. To provide further reassurances, the agency has employed the Hubble Space Telescope to take high-resolution images of the approaching object, and will soon follow suit with Spitzer to observe the fragments in infrared light.

"We are very well acquainted with the trajectory of Comet 73P Schwassmann-Wachmann 3," said Don Yeomans, manager of the agency's Near-Earth Object Program, at Jet Propulsion Laboratory. "There is absolutely no danger to people on the ground or the inhabitants of the International Space Station, as the main body of the object and any pieces from the breakup will pass many millions of miles beyond the Earth."

Yeomans' pointed statement about 73P is apparently in response to vague reports on the World Wide Web that a piece of the comet will hit Earth during the flyby. Although the number of fragments has risen to nearly four dozen, he said none of them poses an impact hazard.

None of the comet's fragments will come closer than 5.5 million miles to Earth during its closest approaches between May 12 and 28 - or more than 20 times the distance between Earth and the Moon.

The main fragment, C, will pass closest to Earth on May 12 at a distance of approximately 7.3 million miles. It will be visible to small telescopes during the morning hours in the constellation Vulpecula, or the Coathanger.

73P is no stranger to astronomers, who have been observing the comet for more than 75 years. They have computed its trajectory repeatedly and have refined the level of precision over time - so 73P's orbit is well known. The real news is that Hubble's images show many more fragments than had been reported by ground-based observers.

The comet is currently comprised of a chain of more than 40 fragments, named alphabetically and stretching across several degrees on the sky. Observers have noted some dramatic brightenings among some of the fragments, which suggests they are continuing to disintegrate - some could disappear altogether.

Hubble caught two of the fragments, B and G, shortly after large outbursts in activity. Hubble also photographed fragment C, which at the time was less active. The resulting images reveal that some sort of destructive process is taking place, in which fragments are continuing to split into smaller chunks.

Hubble has found several dozen house-sized fragments trailing each main fragment. Sequential images of the B fragment, for example, taken a few days apart, suggest the chunks are pushed down the tail by outgassing from the icy, sunward-facing surfaces of the chunks, much like space-walking astronauts are propelled by their jetpacks.

The smaller chunks have the lowest mass, so they are being accelerated away from the parent nucleus faster than the larger chunks. Some of the chunks seem to dissipate completely over the course of several days.

Ancient relics of the early solar system, comet nuclei are porous and fragile mixes of dust and ice. They can break apart from tidal forces when they pass near large bodies, which is what happened to Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 when Jupiter's gravity tore it to pieces in 1992.

Shoemaker-Levy's fragments all plunged directly into Jupiter's atmosphere two years later, creating gaping holes in gas giant's cloudtops and leaving ugly blackened scars that lasted a year.

Comet nuclei also can fly apart from rapid rotation. Or, they can break up from the thermal stresses as they pass near the Sun, or explosively pop apart like corks from champagne bottles due to the outburst of trapped volatile gases.

"Catastrophic breakups may be the ultimate fate of most comets," said Hal Weaver, a planetary astronomer with the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, who led the team that made the recent Hubble observations.

The comet is named for German astronomers Arnold Schwassmann and Arno Arthur Wachmann, who discovered it during a photographic search for asteroids in 1930. At the time, 73P passed within 5.8 million miles of Earth, or 24 times the Earth-Moon distance. The comet orbits the Sun every 5.4 years, but it was not seen again until 1979. The comet was missed again in 1985 but has been observed during every return since.

During the fall of 1995, astronomers witnessed a huge outburst from 73P, and shortly afterwards they identified and labeled four separate nuclei as fragments A, B, C and D, with C being the largest and the presumed principal remnant of the original nucleus.

Only C and B were definitively observed during the next return in 2000-2001, possibly because of poor geometry involving Earth's location versus the cometary fragments. This year's better observing circumstances may have aided the detection of all of the new fragments, but it also is possible the disintegration of the comet is now accelerating.

Community
Email This Article
Comment On This Article

Related Links
NASA Near Earth Object Program
73P Tracking
Asteroid and Comet Mission News, Science and Technology



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Earth-Grazing Comet Continues Its Breakup
Pasadena CA (SPX) Apr 27, 2006
Periodic comet 73P/Schwassmann-Wachmann 3 has now broken into more than 30 different pieces as it approaches the Sun, scientists at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory report.







  • Chinese Oil Safari Hits Nigeria
  • Milestone Achieved in the Development of Biological Fuel Cells
  • Work Starts On Controversial Siberian Pipeline
  • Renewables Still Struggling To Seize Big Share Of Energy Market

  • Defects Found In Reactor At Controversial Bulgarian Nuclear Plant
  • The Real Toll Of Chernobyl Remains Hidden In Background Noise
  • Russian Scientists Downplay Fallout From Chernobyl Disaster
  • Twenty Years On Effects From Chernobyl Disaster Go On

  • Project Achieves Milestone In Analyzing Pollutants Dimming The Atmosphere
  • The 'Oxygen Imperative'
  • NASA Studies Air Pollution Flowing Into US From Abroad
  • Carbon Balance Killed The Dinos

  • Diverse Tropical Forests Defy Metabolic Ecology Models
  • Developing Nations May Save The Tropical Forest
  • Imported Dream Tree Becomes A Nightmare For Kenya
  • Monkey-Dung Offers Clues About Land-Use, Wildlife Ecology

  • Alternatives To The Use Of Nitrate As A Fertiliser
  • Researchers Trawl The Origins Of Sea Fishing In Northern Europe
  • Greens Happy As EU Tightens GMO Testing
  • Killing Wolves May Not Protect Livestock Efficiently

  • Prototype For Revolutionary One-Metre Wide Vehicle Is Developed
  • Highly Realistic Driving Simulator Helps Develop Safer Cars
  • Research On The Road To Intelligent Cars
  • Volvo Promises Hybrid Truck Engines Within Three Years

  • Test Pilot Crossfield Killed In Private Plane Crash
  • Aerospace Industry Slow To Embrace New MEMS Technologies
  • BAE Systems To Sell Airbus Stake, EADS Likely Buyers
  • DaimlerChrysler And Lagardere Cut Stake In EADS

  • Could NASA Get To Pluto Faster? Space Expert Says Yes - By Thinking Nuclear
  • NASA plans to send new robot to Jupiter
  • Los Alamos Hopes To Lead New Era Of Nuclear Space Tranportion With Jovian Mission
  • Boeing Selects Leader for Nuclear Space Systems Program

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement