homehome Home chatchat Notifications


ISON - the comet of the century - caught on film by spacecraft

If you remember, a few weeks ago I reported on the ISON comet,  discovered just last year, but which is already hailed as possibly the “comet of the century”. If the ISON comet won’t collapse during its closest approach to the sun, its trail will be so bright and massive that  it will become visible […]

Tibi Puiu
February 6, 2013 @ 9:53 am

share Share

If you remember, a few weeks ago I reported on the ISON comet,  discovered just last year, but which is already hailed as possibly the “comet of the century”. If the ISON comet won’t collapse during its closest approach to the sun, its trail will be so bright and massive that  it will become visible to the naked eye during the day, and as bright as a full moon during the night – all for a few years too!

Recently,  NASA’s Deep Impact spacecraft has acquired its first images of comet C/2012 S1 (ISON) after it surveyed the space body over a 36-hour period on Jan. 17 and 18, 2013, from a distance of 493 million miles (793 million kilometers). A short video footage of the comet swirling through the solar system can be seen below.

 

“This is the fourth comet on which we have performed science observations and the farthest point from Earth from which we’ve tried to transmit data on a comet,” said Tim Larson, project manager for the Deep Impact spacecraft at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. “The distance limits our bandwidth, so it’s a little like communicating through a modem after being used to DSL. But we’re going to coordinate our science collection and playback so we maximize our return on this potentially spectacular comet.”

This is the orbital trajectory of comet C/2012 S1 (ISON). The comet is currently located just inside the orbit of Jupiter. In November 2013, ISON will pass less than 1.1 million miles (1.8 million kilometers) from the sun's surface. The fierce heating it experiences during this close approach to the sun could turn the comet into a bright naked-eye object Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

This is the orbital trajectory of comet C/2012 S1 (ISON). The comet is currently located just inside the orbit of Jupiter. In November 2013, ISON will pass less than 1.1 million miles (1.8 million kilometers) from the sun’s surface. The fierce heating it experiences during this close approach to the sun could turn the comet into a bright naked-eye object Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

The comet already has a 64,000km-long tail of dust and gas that will become visible to the naked eye later in the year, in November. This, of course, if it does not brake down during its closest flyby from the sun – a distance of not much more than a million km from the Sun’s surface.

It’s believed ISON, like most long period comets of its kind, originated from the Oort cloud – a giant spherical cloud of icy bodies located far away in the outer rim of our solar system. Every once in a while, bodies from the cloud get disturbed out of their established orbit by a passing star of a combination of gravitational effects produced by other stars and large massed bodies in the Milky Way. Once a comet gets a nudge, it soon begins an arching plunge toward the inner solar system in a journey that might take thousands of years before it vanishes.

The ISON was discovered just last year by two Russian astronomers using the International Scientific Optical Network’s 16-inch (40-centimeter) telescope near Kislovodsk. If this “sungrazing” comet survives intact, it should emerge from the near-miss even brighter than before, and could be lighting up our skies through January 2014 – perhaps even in broad daylight.

share Share

NASA’s Curiosity Rover Spotted Driving Across Mars From Space for the First Time

An orbiter captured Curiosity mid-drive on the Red Planet.

Japan Plans to Beam Solar Power from Space to Earth

The Sun never sets in space — and Japan has found a way to harness this unlimited energy.

Giant Planet Was Just Caught Falling Into Its Star and It Changes What We Thought About Planetary Death

A rare cosmic crime reveals a planet’s slow-motion death spiral into its star.

This Planet Is So Close to Its Star It Is Literally Falling Apart, Leaving a Comet-like Tail of Dust in Space

This dying planet sheds a “Mount Everest” of rock each day.

We Could One Day Power a Galactic Civilization with Spinning Black Holes

Could future civilizations plug into the spin of space-time itself?

Elon Musk could soon sell missile defense to the Pentagon like a Netflix subscription

In January, President Donald Trump signed an executive order declaring missile attacks the gravest threat to America. It was the official greenlight for one of the most ambitious military undertakings in recent history: the so-called “Golden Dome.” Now, just months later, Elon Musk’s SpaceX and two of its tech allies—Palantir and Anduril—have emerged as leading […]

Have scientists really found signs of alien life on K2-18b?

Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. We're not quite there.

How a suitcase-sized NASA device could map shrinking aquifers from space

Next‑gen gravity maps could help track groundwater, ice loss, and magma.

Astronomers Say They Finally Found Half the Universe’s Matter. It was Missing In Plain Sight

It was beginning to get embarassing but vast clouds of hydrogen may finally resolve a cosmic mystery.

Trump’s Budget Plan Is Eviscerating NASA and NOAA Science

Science is under attack.