Day of Reckoning: Comet ISON disappears in close pass around the Sun
November 28, 2013 – SPACE - A
comet’s 5.5-million-year journey to the inner solar system apparently
ended during a suicidal trip around the sun, leaving no trace of its
once-bright tail or even remnants of rock and dust, scientists said on
Thursday. The comet, known as ISON, was discovered last year when it was
still far beyond Jupiter, raising the prospect of a spectacular
naked-eye object by the time it graced Earth’s skies in December. Comet
ISON passed just 730,000 miles (1.2 million km) from the surface of the
sun at 1:37 p.m. EST/1837 GMT on Thursday. Astronomers used a fleet of
solar telescopes to look for the comet after its slingshot around the
sun, but to no avail. “I’m not seeing anything that emerged from the
behind the solar disk. That could be the nail in the coffin,”
astrophysicist Karl Battams, with the Naval Research Laboratory in
Washington, said during a live broadcast on NASA TV. “It’s sad that it
seemed to have ended this way, but we’re going to learn more about this
comet,” he added. At closest approach, the comet was moving faster than
217 miles per second(350 km per second) through the sun’s atmosphere. At
that distance, it reached temperatures of 5,000 degrees
Fahrenheit(2,760 degrees Celsius) – hot enough to vaporize not just ices
in the comet’s body, but dust and rock as well.
If the comet or any large fragments
survived the close encounter with the sun, they would be visible to the
naked eye in Earth’s skies in a week or two. The comet was discovered
last year by two amateur astronomers using Russia’s International
Scientific Optical Network, or ISON. Comets are believed to be frozen
remains left over from the formation of the solar system some 4.5
billion years ago. The family of comets that ISON belongs to resides in
the Oort Cloud, located about 10,000 times farther away from the sun
than Earth, halfway to the next star. Occasionally, an Oort Cloud comet
is gravitationally nudged out of the cloud by a passing star and into a
flight path that millions of years later brings it into the inner solar
system. Computer models show ISON was a first-time visitor. “I hope we
see another one soon,” said Dean Pesnell, project scientist for NASA’s
Solar Dynamics Observatory. –Reuters
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