THE TAIL ON COMET ISON IS 21 TIMES THE DISTANCE BETWEEN EARTH AND THE M00N*
COMET
ISON UPDATE: Reports of naked-eye sightings of Comet ISON are coming
in from around the world. Experienced observers put the comet's
magntitude at +5.5 on Nov. 16th. This means it is now fully 10 times
brighter than it was only three days ago before the outburst. To the
naked eye, ISON appears as a faint smudge of pale green light low in the
pre-dawn sky. The view through a telescope is more dramatic. The
comet's tail has become a riotous crowd of gaseous streamers stretching
more than 3.5 degrees across the sky. Amateur astronomer Waldemar
Skorupa sends this picture from Kahler Asten, Germany:The tail is so
long, he couldn't fit the whole thing in the field of view. How long is
it? Comet ISON's tail extends more than 8 million kilometers behind the
comet's nucleus. For comparison, that's 21 times the distance between
Earth and the Moon.
Because so much gas and dust is spewing from
the comet's core, it is impossible to see clearly what caused Comet
ISON's outburst on Nov. 13-14. One possibility is that fresh veins of
ice are opening up in the comet's nucleus, vaporizing furiously as ISON
approaches the sun. Another possibility is that the nucleus has
completely fragmented.
"If so, it will still be several days
before we know for sure," says Karl Battams, an astronomer with NASA's
Comet ISON Observing Campaign. "When comet nuclei fall apart, it's not
like a shrapnel-laden explosion. Instead, the chunks slowly drift apart
at slightly different speeds. Given that ISON's nucleus is shrouded in
such a tremendous volume of light-scattering dust and gas right now, it
will be almost impossible to determine this for at least a few days and
perhaps not until the comet reaches the field of view of NASA's STEREO
HI-1A instrument on November 21, 2013. We will have to wait for the
chunks to drift apart a sufficient distance, assuming they don't crumble
first."
In short, no one knows for sure what is happening to
Comet ISON. This could be the comet's death throes--or just the first of
many brightening events the comet experiences as it plunges toward the
sun for a close encounter on Thanksgiving Day (Nov. 28th).
Monitoring
is encouraged. Comet ISON rises in the east just before the sun.
Amateur astronomers, if you have a GOTO telescope, enter these
coordinates. Dates of special interest include Nov. 17th and 18th when
the comet will pass the bright star Spica, making ISON extra-easy to
find.
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