'Brighter than a full moon':
The biggest star of 2013 could be the century's comet
A comet
discovered by two Russian astronomers will be visible from Earth next
year.
At the moment it is a faint object, visible only in sophisticated
telescopes as a point of light moving slowly against the background
stars.
It doesn't seem much - a frozen chunk of rock and ice - one of many
moving in the depths of space. But this one is being tracked with eager
anticipation by astronomers from around the world, and in a year
everyone could know its name.
Comet Ison could draw millions out into the dark to witness what
could be the brightest comet seen in many generations - brighter even
than the full Moon.
It was found as a blur on an electronic image of the night sky taken
through a telescope at the Kislovodsk Observatory in Russia as part of a
project to survey the sky looking for comets and asteroids - chunks of
rock and ice that litter space. Astronomers Vitali Nevski and Artyom
Novichonok were expecting to use the International Scientific Optical
Network's (Ison) 40cm telescope on the night of September 20 but clouds
halted their plans.
It was a frustrating night but about half an hour prior to the
beginning of morning twilight, they noticed the sky was clearing and got
the telescope and camera up and running to obtain some survey images in
the constellations of Gemini and Cancer.
When the images were obtained Nevski loaded them into a computer
program designed to detect asteroids and comets moving between images.
He noticed a rather bright object with unusually slow movement, which he
thought could only mean it was situated way beyond the orbit of Jupiter.
But he couldn't tell if the object was a comet, so Novichonok booked
time on a larger telescope to take another look. Less than a day later
the new images revealed that Nevski and Novichonok had discovered a
comet, which was named Comet Ison. A database search showed it has been
seen in images taken by other telescopes earlier that year and in late
2011. These observations allowed its orbit to be calculated, and when
astronomers did that they let out a collective “wow.”
Comet Ison has taken millions of years to reach us travelling from
the so-called Oort cloud - a reservoir of trillions and trillions of
chunks of rock and ice, leftovers from the birth of the planets. It
reaches out more than a light-year - a quarter of the way to the nearest
star. In the Oort cloud the Sun is but a distant point of light whose
feeble gravity is just enough to hold onto the cloud.
Every once in a while a tiny tug of gravity, perhaps from a nearby
star or wandering object, disturbs the cloud sending some of its comets
out into interstellar space to be lost forever and a few are scattered
sunward. Comet Ison is making its first, and perhaps only visit to us.
Its life has been cold, frozen hard and unchanging, but it is moving
closer to the Sun, and getting warmer.
Ison's surface is very dark - darker than asphalt - pockmarked and
dusty with ice beneath the surface. It's a small body, a few tens of
miles across, with a tiny pull of gravity. If you stood upon it you
could leap 20 miles into space taking over a week to come down again,
watching as the comet rotated beneath you. You could walk to the
equator, kneel down and gather up handfuls of comet material to make
snowballs, throw them in a direction against the comet's spin and watch
them hang motionless in front of you. But it will not remain quiet on
Comet Ison for the Sun's heat will bring it to life.
By the end of summer it will become visible in small telescopes and
binoculars. By October it will pass close to Mars and things will begin
to stir. The surface will shift as the ice responds to the thermal
shock, cracks will appear in the crust, tiny puffs of gas will rise from
it as it is warmed. The comet's tail is forming.
Slowly at first but with increasing vigour, as it passes the orbit of
Earth, the gas and dust geysers will gather force. The space around the
comet becomes brilliant as the ice below the surface turns into gas and
erupts, reflecting the light of the Sun. Now Ison is surrounded by a
cloud of gas called the coma, hundreds of thousands of miles from side
to side.
The comet's rotation curves these jets into space as they trail into
spirals behind it. As they move out the gas trails are stopped and blown
backwards by the Solar Wind.
By late November it will be visible to the unaided eye just after
dark in the same direction as the setting Sun. Its tail could stretch
like a searchlight into the sky above the horizon. Then it will swing
rapidly around the Sun, passing within two million miles of it, far
closer than any planet ever does, to emerge visible in the evening sky
heading northward towards the pole star.
It could be an “unaided eye” object for months. When it is close in
its approach to the Sun it could become intensely brilliant but at that
stage it would be difficult and dangerous to see without special
instrumentation as it would be only a degree from the sun.
Remarkably Ison might not be the only spectacular comet visible next
year.
As Comet Ison heads back to deep space in 2014 the sky above it would
begin to clear as the dust and gas geysers loose their energy. Returning
to the place where the Sun is a distant point of light, Comet Ison may
never return. Its tail points outward now as the solar wind is at its
back, and it fades and the comet falls quiet once more, this time
forever.
- The Independent
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