[meteorite-list] Comet C/ISON Details Emerge as it Races Toward the Sun

From: Ron Baalke <baalke_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Thu, 10 Oct 2013 13:50:07 -0700 (PDT)
Message-ID: <201310102050.r9AKo7aY012337_at_zagami.jpl.nasa.gov>

http://www.psi.edu/news/ISON3.html

Comet C/ISON Details Emerge as it Races Toward the Sun
Planetary Science Institute
Oct. 9, 2013

Tucson, Ariz. -- Scientists are unraveling more information on Comet C/2012
S1 (ISON) as it continues on its journey toward the Sun. Comet C/ISON
will skim 730,000 miles above the Sun's surface on Nov. 28 and has the
potential to be readily visible from Earth starting in early December.
 
"We measured the rotational pole of the nucleus. The pole indicates that
only one side of the comet is being heated by the Sun on its way in until
approximately one week before it reaches it closest point to the Sun,"
said Planetary Science Institute Research Scientist Jian-Yang Li, who
led a team that imaged the comet.
 
"Since the surface on the dark side of the comet should still retain a
large fraction of very volatile materials, the sudden exposure to the
strong sunlight when it gets closer to the Sun than Mercury could trigger
huge outbursts of material," Li said.
 
Li presented the findings today at the American Astronomical Society's
Division for Planetary Sciences 45th Annual Meeting in Denver.
 
Comet C/ISON was imaged with the Hubble Space Telescope using the Wide
Field Camera 3 on April 10.
 
"We measured the color of the coma, and found that the outer part of the
coma is slightly redder than the inner part," Li said. "This color change
is unusual in comets, and seems to imply that the inner part contains
some water ice grains, which sublimate as they move away from the nucleus."
 
Comet C/ISON was discovered in September 2012 when it was farther away
from the Sun than Jupiter, and was already active at such a great distance.
This is distinct from most other sungrazers - comets that pass extremely
close to the sun - that are only discovered and remain visible for at
most several days when nearest the Sun. At such a close perihelion distance
from the Sun, sungrazers are expected to be intensely heated by the Sun,
and sublimate not only ice but also silicates and even metals, releasing
a tremendous amount of dust. The expectation is high that Comet C/ISON
will be much brighter and more spectacular than most other sungrazers
when it puts on a show late this year.
 
"As a first-time visitor to the inner solar system, Comet C/ISON provides
astronomers a rare opportunity to study a fresh comet preserved since
the formation of the Solar System," Li said. "The expected high brightness
of the comet as it nears the Sun allows for many important measurements
that are impossible for most other fresh comets."
 
NASA and the Space Telescope Science Institute funded the project.
Received on Thu 10 Oct 2013 04:50:07 PM PDT


Help support this free mailing list:



StumbleUpon
del.icio.us
reddit
Yahoo MyWeb