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Comet Lovejoy and the ISS

On December 24, On December 24,



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Comet Lovejoy over Paranal

Comet Lovejoy (C/2011 W3) Comet Lovejoy (C/2011 W3)



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Christmas Comet Lovejoy captured at Paranal

Astronomy Magazine News Article – Released:12/27/2011
Astronomy.com News – Presented by Astronomy Magazine

Astrophoto: Comet Lovejoy from Canberra by Barry Armstead

Astrophoto: Comet Lovejoy from Canberra by Barry Armstead

Comet Lovejoy from Canberra. Image Credit: Barry Armstead

Barry Armstead was among the lucky people who were able to capture the amazing show made by Comet Lovejoy in the skies of the Southern hemisphere the past few days.

“I got up on Thursday night/Friday morning at 3am, checked the sky and it was a black blanket of cloud. I observed for around 20 minutes while simultaneously checking the Bureau of Meteorology to confirm that the clouds weren’t going anywhere. Back to bed to grind my teeth and grumble something about Murphy’s law.

This morning, I stayed up until 1:30am, had a little snooze on the couch and checked the night sky every half hour. At 2:30am the sky turned crystal clear! I loaded everything in the ute and took off like a bull at a gate for the mountains south-west of Canberra and away from the city light.

And there it was! Comet Lovejoy in all it’s glory, lighting up the heavens like a searchlight, signalling passing spacecraft.”

More images from Barry Armstead below!(…)
Read the rest of Astrophoto: Comet Lovejoy from Canberra by Barry Armstead (118 words)


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Comet Lovejoy Keeps on Giving

SkyandTelescope.com’s Most Recent Articles

Comet Lovejoy Keeps on Giving

SkyandTelescope.com’s Most Recent Observing Stories

Another Stunning Image of Comet Lovejoy by Colin Legg

Comet Lovejoy by Colin Legg

Comet Lovejoy by Colin Legg


It’s been one more day since Colin Legg posted his previous amazing photos and videos of Comet Legg. This new version is even better, especially with it reflecting off the water.

Here’s what Colin had to say about it on IceinSpace:

Had another lovely view of the comet last night wandering the shore of the Estuary. It’s quite unique down there. The Perth and Mandurah sky domes light up the northern half of the sky, while the east and south east are pitch black (except for a couple of small towns). The north glow is enough to walk by once dark adapted.

Anyway, while wandering I came across a small embayment with still water and nice reflections of the comet. Used the same settings as last night to get the attached shot.

Check out some of Colin’s videos over on Vimeo.



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A tough comet survives a close encounter with the Sun

Astronomy Magazine News Article – Released:12/16/2011
Astronomy.com News – Presented by Astronomy Magazine

Comet Lovejoy’s Date With Destiny

SkyandTelescope.com’s Most Recent News Stories

Comet Lovejoy: Sungrazing Survivor

Like most other sungrazing comets, Comet Lovejoy (C/2011 W3) Like most other sungrazing comets, Comet Lovejoy (C/2011 W3)



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Comet Lovejoy: A Solar Survivor

SkyandTelescope.com’s Most Recent News Stories

Best Look Yet of Comet Lovejoy’s Slingshot Around the Sun

There have been some great images and video of Comet Lovejoy’s close encounter with the Sun, but this video put together by Scott Wiessinger from Goddard Spaceflight Center combines and zooms in on the best views from the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO), which adjusted its cameras in order to watch the trajectory.

The first part of the video from SDO, (taken in 171 Angstrom wavelength, which is typically shown in yellow) taken on Dec 15, 2011 showing Comet Lovejoy moving in toward the Sun, with its tail “wiggling” from its interaction with the solar wind. The second part of the clip shows the comet exiting from behind the right side of the Sun, after an hour of travel through its closest approach.

Amazing to be able to follow this comet’s journey so closely!



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Comet Lovejoy: A Solar Survivor

SkyandTelescope.com’s Most Recent Articles

Comet Lovejoy’s Date With Destiny

SkyandTelescope.com’s Most Recent Articles

Comet Lovejoy’s Date With Destiny

SkyandTelescope.com’s Most Recent Observing Stories

Comet Garradd in Transition

SkyandTelescope.com’s Most Recent Articles

Comet Garradd in Transition

SkyandTelescope.com’s Most Recent Observing Stories

NASA says Comet Elenin gone and should be forgotten

Astronomy Magazine News Article – Released:10/26/2011
Astronomy.com News – Presented by Astronomy Magazine

Comet Elenin’s Last Gasp

SkyandTelescope.com’s Most Recent Observing Stories

Comet Elenin’s Last Gasp

SkyandTelescope.com’s Most Recent Articles

Faulkes Team Images Trojan Jupiter Comet


Jupiter Comet

Based on an observation posted on the Near Earth Object confirmation page from an image taken by A. D. Grauer using the mount Lemmon observatory, Faulkes telescope team members Nick Howes, Giovanni Sostero and Ernesto Guido along with University of Glamorgan student Antos Kasprzyk and amateur astronomer Iain Melville, imaged what is potentially some of the first direct evidence for a Trojan Jupiter Comet (…)
Read the rest of Faulkes Team Images Trojan Jupiter Comet (359 words)


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Tails of Comet Garradd

A good target for binoculars and small telescopes, A good target for binoculars and small telescopes,



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NASA’s Spitzer detects comet storm in nearby solar system

Astronomy Magazine News Article – Released:10/20/2011
Astronomy.com News – Presented by Astronomy Magazine

Comet Water for a Parched Earth

SkyandTelescope.com’s Most Recent Articles

The Comet Hartley 2 Cruise

Early last November, small but active Comet Hartley 2 Early last November, small but active Comet Hartley 2



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Comet Water for a Parched Earth

SkyandTelescope.com’s Most Recent News Stories

Comet and CME on the Sun

Did a sun-diving comet just cause a solar explosion? Did a sun-diving comet just cause a solar explosion?



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Watch a comet move

Astroimager John Bunyan from Grants Pass, Oregon, just sent me a video of Comet C/2009 P1 (Garradd). Although the video’s run-time is short (only 5 seconds), it encompasses 2.5 hours of exposures.

John shot thirty 5-minute images back to back and compiled them into this video. The movie shows Comet Garradd slowly drifting toward the Coathanger asterism, a grouping of 10 stars brighter than 7th magnitude in the constellation Vulpecula the Fox.

This group appears distinct to the naked eye on dark nights, and it’s even better through binoculars. The brightest members are 4 Vulpeculae, at magnitude 5.1; 5 Vulpeculae, at magnitude 5.6; and 7 Vulpeculae, which shines at magnitude 6.3.

The Coathanger, also known as Collinder 399 and Brocchi’s Cluster, was the 399th entry in a catalog of open clusters compiled by Swedish astronomer Per Arne Collinder. His catalog contains 471 objects.

Nice job, John!

 

 

Related blog: Close encounters of the cometary kind, by Editor David J. Eicher


Astronomy.com blog

Guest blog: A historical comet discovery

An amateur astronomer in India recently contacted us to let Astronomy magazine know a bit of comet discovery history. Amar A. Sharma, an active visual comet and deep-sky observer from the Bangalore Astronomical Society in India, told us of the first (and only) comet to be discovered by an Indian. Thanks for the great information, Amar!

Manali Kallat Vainu Bappu (1927–1982) is the father of modern Indian astronomy. He also happens to be the only Indian after whom a comet has been named.

After obtaining his master’s degree in physics from the university of Madras in Tamil Nadu, India, Bappu attended the Harvard Graduate School of Astronomy in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on a scholarship. Within a few months of his arrival at Harvard, on the early morning of July 2, 1949, Bappu was observing for the first time at the George R. Agassiz Station (now known as the Oak Ridge Observatory) and took a 60-minute exposure plate in Cygnus.

Plates such as these are ordinarily sent back to Cambridge for processing, but astronomer Bart Bok suggested that Bappu develop it himself. When he did so the following afternoon, Bappu announced, “Now I’m going to look for comets.” Bok, amused, responded: “Ha, ha, everyone looks for comets.” But upon inspection, Bappu spotted one, and both Gordon A. Newkirk and Bok confirmed the discovery. The comet discovered was 13th magnitude.

From several such plates that Bappu took on successive nights, the astronomers calculated the comet’s orbit to be so large that it would reappear after 60,000 years! The comet was at perihelion (its closest distance to the Sun) October 26, 1949, when it was 2.05 astronomical units from our star (1 AU is the average Earth-Sun distance). Its aphelion distance (its farthest distance from the Sun) is 3,033.60 AU. (You can find the orbit diagram and details at NASA JPL’s Small-Body Database Browser.)

The International Astronomical Union (IAU) officially designated the comet as C/1949 N1 (Bappu-Bok-Newkirk), and it was in IAU Circular #1778.

The ripples of this discovery reached India soon enough, but there were no congratulations offered from the government. The education department of the Indian Embassy in Washington, D.C., sharply reprimanded the young man and asked him to focus on his research instead.

The reprove came in the wake of a cable that the Hyderabad government had sent the embassy instructing them to convey to the student that he was to undertake research according to the terms of his scholarship. “See that your government’s wishes are carried out in every respect,” the letter commanded.

Astronomer Fred Whipple of the Harvard College Observatory wrote a response to the bureaucrat. “This is the first occasion in my experience,” Whipple wrote, “in which a foreign government has taken on itself the criticism of our educational methods in the Astronomy Department of Harvard University.” It would be better for the Hyderabad government, he suggested, to communicate the reasons for its criticism to the Harvard authorities instead of “reprimanding the student in such a way that he finds it difficult to follow our guidance in his advance education.”

Whipple then explained that the nature of the discovery was purely accidental. The student’s failure to note this unusual object on his photographic plates would have been a sin of scientific omission, and his failure to announce the discovery would have been a serious neglect of his duty to the scientific world, he said.

Explaining the importance of background training that is necessary for doctoral studies, Whipple sardonically pointed out that if the government insisted on the student confining his research to a narrow field, then it had erred in sending him to Harvard.

Bappu completed his Ph.D. in 1952 and joined the Palomar Observatory in California as a Carnegie Fellow. There, along with American astronomer Colin Wilson, he discovered a relationship between the luminosity of particular kinds of stars and some of their spectral characteristics. This important observation was published in a paper in 1957, and came to be known as the Bappu-Wilson effect. It is used to determine the luminosity and distance of these kinds of stars.

In 1949, the Astronomical Society of the Pacific awarded Bappu the Donahue Comet Medal. He was elected as Honorary Foreign Fellow of the Belgium Academy of Sciences and was an honorary member of the American Astronomical Society. He was even elected president of the International Astronomical Union in 1979, and served from 1979 to 1982.

His name is etched in the field of astronomy through other contributions, too. He founded an optical observatory in South India at Kavalur, which still houses Asia's largest parabolic mirror of 2.3-meter diameter, along with other telescopes.

Thanks again to Amar Sharma for sharing this story with the magazine. It’s always exciting to hear about the history of astronomy.


Astronomy.com blog

Astrophoto: Comet Garradd by Oleg Mazurenko

Astrophoto: Comet Garradd by Oleg Mazurenko

Comet Garradd. Credit: Oleg Mazurenko

Comet Garradd has become the talk of the town being the brightest comet in the sky during the past few weeks. Comet Garradd, also known by its nomenclature C/2009 P1, was discovered 2 years ago by Gordon Garradd in Australia.

Oleg Mazurenko captured this photo of Comet Garradd on September 4, 2011 at Manning Park, BC, Canada. He used a Canon 350D camera with Equinox – 80, ISO 1600 and exposure of 2 minutes.

Want to get your astrophoto featured on Universe Today? Join our Flickr group, post in our Forum or send us your images by email (this means you’re giving us permission to post them). Please explain what’s in the picture, when you took it, the equipment you used, etc.



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Comet Garradd and the Coat Hanger

Sweeping through planet Earth's night sky, last weekend Sweeping through planet Earth’s night sky, last weekend



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Comet in the June Dawn

SkyandTelescope.com’s Most Recent Observing Stories

Comet in the June Dawn

SkyandTelescope.com’s Most Recent Articles

M27: Not a Comet

While hunting for comets in the skies above 18th century France, While hunting for comets in the skies above 18th century France,



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Comet Garradd Passes Ten Thousand Stars

Comet Garradd continues to brighten as it drifts across the northern sky. Comet Garradd continues to brighten as it drifts across the northern sky.



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Comet Elenin Self-Destructs

SkyandTelescope.com’s Most Recent Observing Stories

Comet Elenin Self-Destructs

SkyandTelescope.com’s Most Recent Articles

Free LIVE Broadcast of Comet Garradd – August 22, 2011

Are you ready for some excitement? How would you like to watch a LIVE broadcast of Comet C2009 P1 Garradd?! Thanks to our good friends at Barket Observatory and clear skies in Israel, we can do just that! Step inside to our virtual observatory… (…)
Read the rest of Free LIVE Broadcast of Comet Garradd – August 22, 2011 (408 words)


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Comet Elenin poses no threat to Earth

Astronomy Magazine News Article – Released:8/18/2011
Astronomy.com News – Presented by Astronomy Magazine

Meteor Shower Points Towards Undiscovered Earthbound Comet

This February Eta Draconid was filmed by Peter Jenniskens with one of the low-light-level video cameras of the Cameras for Allsky Meteor Surveillance (CAMS) station in Mountain View, California, at 07:59:24 UT on February 4, 2011. CREDIT: All Sky Cameras/Peter Jenniskens

With the annual Perseid Meteor Shower already underway, we’re looking to the skies and thinking about what causes these celestial fireworks. We know for the most part that meteor showers are the by-product of comets, but what happens when seemingly random meteors become not so random? The answer is a long term comet which could be pointed right at Earth. (…)
Read the rest of Meteor Shower Points Towards Undiscovered Earthbound Comet (580 words)


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Comet Garradd and Messier 15

Recorded on August 2, Recorded on August 2,



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Trail of crumbs discovered from potentially hazardous comet

Astronomy Magazine News Article – Released:7/29/2011
Astronomy.com News – Presented by Astronomy Magazine

Introducing Comet Garradd

Another large snowball is falling toward the Sun.  Another large snowball is falling toward the Sun.



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Pan-STARRS telescope spots new distant comet

Astronomy Magazine News Article – Released:6/20/2011
Astronomy.com News – Presented by Astronomy Magazine

EPOXI finds 103P/Hartley is a hyperactive comet

Astronomy Magazine News Article – Released:6/17/2011
Astronomy.com News – Presented by Astronomy Magazine

EPOXI Encounters Energetic Comet Hartley 2

Jets can be seen streaming out of the nucleus, or main body, of comet Hartley 2 in this image from NASA's EPOXI mission. The nucleus is approximately 2 kilometers (1.2 miles) long and .4 kilometers (.25 miles) across at the narrow "neck." Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/UMD

No, EPOXI isn’t the name of a new super glue, but an abbreviation for the continuation of Deep Impact. While the original mission to study Comet 9P/Tempel was a huge success, the spacecraft continues to explore objects of opportunity. Its name is derived from Extrasolar Planet Observations and Characterization (EPOCh) and the Deep Impact Extended Investigation (DIXI)… and it’s now fulfilling another goal as it swings by Comet Hartley 2. It approached, encountered and departed, sending back 117,000 images and spectral findings – along with some surprising observations. (…)
Read the rest of EPOXI Encounters Energetic Comet Hartley 2 (604 words)


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A Comet Worth Waiting For?

SkyandTelescope.com’s Most Recent Observing Stories

A Comet Worth Waiting For?

SkyandTelescope.com’s Most Recent Articles

Comet Elenin: Just Passing By

Is Earth's impending doom close at hand?

It starts out innocently enough: a small speck against a field of background stars, barely noticeable in the image data. But… it’s a speck that wasn’t there before. Subsequent images confirm its existence – there’s something out there. Something bright, something large, and it’s moving through our solar system very quickly. The faint blur indicates that it’s a comet, an icy visitor from the outermost reaches of the solar system. And it’s headed straight toward Earth.

Exhaustive calculations are run and re-run. Computer simulations are executed. All possibilities are taken into consideration, and yet there’s no alternative to be found; our world will face a close encounter with a comet in mere months’ time. Phone calls are made, a flurry of electronic messages fly between computer terminals across the world, consultations are held with top experts in the field. We are unprepared… what can we do? What does this mean for civilization as we know it? What will this speeding icy bullet from outer space do to our planet?

The answer? Nothing.

Nothing at all. In fact, it probably won’t even be very interesting to look at – if you can even find it when it passes by.

(Sorry for the let-down.)

(…)
Read the rest of Comet Elenin: Just Passing By (1,015 words)


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Rosetta comet probe enters hibernation in deep space

Astronomy Magazine News Article – Released:6/8/2011
Astronomy.com News – Presented by Astronomy Magazine

At the heart of Comet 103P/Hartley, a new breed of comet?

Astronomy Magazine News Article – Released:5/18/2011
Astronomy.com News – Presented by Astronomy Magazine

Comet Between Fireworks and Lightning

Sometimes the sky itself is the best show in town.  Sometimes the sky itself is the best show in town.



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Researchers gain new insights into Comet 103P/Hartley

Astronomy Magazine News Article – Released:5/17/2011
Astronomy.com News – Presented by Astronomy Magazine

So-So Prospects for Comet Elenin

SkyandTelescope.com’s Most Recent Observing Stories

So-So Prospects for Comet Elenin

SkyandTelescope.com’s Most Recent Articles

Frozen comet had a watery past, University of Arizona scientists find

Astronomy Magazine News Article – Released:4/6/2011
Astronomy.com News – Presented by Astronomy Magazine

Stardust-NExT sees Jets and impact crater at Comet Tempel 1 and says Farewell !

Stardust-NExT enhanced image of Jets from Comet Tempel 1
Stardust-NExT photographed jets of gas and particles streaming from Comet Tempel 1 during Feb 14, 2011 flyby. The raw image was taken 15 seconds before closest approach at a distance of 244 kilometers, and has been extensively enhanced by outside analysts to visibly show the jets. Annotations show the location of the jets and the crater created by a projectile hurled by NASA’s prior Deep Impact mission in 2005. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/University of Maryland/Post process and annotations by Marco Di Lorenzo/Kenneth Kremer
Poster below shows the changing view of the comets surface and
the deep impact crater during the course of the Tempel 1 flyby

Farewell Stardust-NExT !

Today marks the end to the final chapter in the illustrious saga of NASA’s Stardust-NExT spacecraft, a groundbreaking mission of cometary exploration.

Mission controllers at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory commanded the probe to fire the main engines for the very last time today at about 7 p.m. EDT (March 24). The burn will continue until the spacecraft entirely depletes the tiny amount of residual fuel remaining in the propellant tanks. The Stardust probe is now being decommissioned and is about 312 million kilometers away from Earth. (…)
Read the rest of Stardust-NExT sees Jets and impact crater at Comet Tempel 1 and says Farewell ! (746 words)


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Stardust completes picture-perfect flyby of Comet Tempel 1

Astronomy Magazine News Article – Released:2/16/2011
Astronomy.com News – Presented by Astronomy Magazine

Comet Tempel 1 from Stardust NeXT Spacecraft

No comet has ever been visited twice before. No comet has ever been visited twice before.



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NASA’s Stardust Discovers Human made Deep Impact Crater on Comet Tempel 1

Tempel 1, as Seen by Two Spacecraft
These two images show the different views of comet Tempel 1 seen by NASA’s Deep Impact spacecraft (left) and NASA’s Stardust spacecraft (right). Two craters, about 300 meters (1,000 feet) in diameter, help scientists locate the area hit by the impactor released by Deep Impact in July 2005. The dashed lines correlate the features. Stardust approached the comet from a different angle on Feb. 14, 2011. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/University of Maryland/Cornell

NASA’s aging and amazing Stardust space probe has at last discovered the human made crater created on Comet Tempel 1 in 2005 by the history making cosmic smash up with NASA’s Deep Impact penetrator. Stardust streaked past the comet on Feb. 14 at 10.9 km/sec, or 24,000 MPH, and succeeded in briefly photographing the crater as it approached within 178 km (111 mi) during the fleeting moments of the probes closest approach.

The intentional celestial collision in 2005 was designed to violently unleash the buried remnants of the early solar system into an enormous ejecta cloud of dusty debris that scientists could sift for clues to help unlock the secrets of how we all formed and evolved some 4.5 Billion Years ago. (…)
Read the rest of NASA’s Stardust Discovers Human made Deep Impact Crater on Comet Tempel 1 (1,057 words)


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Post tags: Comet Tempel 1, Comet Wild 2, deep impact mission, NASA, Stardust, STARDUST-NExT

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Romantic Valentines Day Encounter Looms with Icy Comet

NASA’s Romantic Rendezvous in space on Valentine’s Day – Feb. 14.
The planned Valentine’s Day (Feb. 14, 2011) rendezvous between NASA’s Stardust-NExT mission and Comet Tempel 1 inspired this chocolate-themed artist’s concept. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech.
Video and graphics below illustrate the icy encounter and animate the flyby trajectory.
NASA TV: Live Coverage listed below.
Update:
See below the latest navigation camera images taken on Feb. 11 – newly obtained from JPL. These images are crucial for precisely aiming Stardust-NExT

At last, NASA embraces a romantic rendezvous in the dark void of deep space.

And soon the whole world can watch the up close meet up of the hot Stardust probe and the volatile, icy comet. The historic space tryst is just a day away!

The Stardust-NExT spacecraft successfully hot fired its thrusters for the final course correction maneuver (TCM-33) on Feb. 12, setting up the fleeting celestial encounter with Comet Tempel 1 on Valentine’s Day, Feb. 14, Monday, at 11:37 p.m. EST. The space science probe will fly by the speeding comet at a distance of approximately 200 kilometers (124 miles) and at a speed of 10 km/sec.

Naturally, the fleeing comet is icy, unpredictable and exploding with jets of gas and dust particles. (…)
Read the rest of Romantic Valentines Day Encounter Looms with Icy Comet (1,535 words)


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Post tags: Comet Tempel 1, Comet Wild 2, Comets, deep impact, NASA, Stardust, STARDUST-NExT

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Comet Tempel 1 Now in StardustNeXT’s Field of View

The first image of comet Tempel 1 taken by NASA’s Stardust spacecraft is a composite made from observations on Jan. 18 and 19, 2011. The panel on the right highlights the location of comet Tempel 1 in the frame. On Valentine’s Day (Feb. 14 in U.S. time zones), Stardust will fly within about 200 kilometers (124 miles) of the comet’s nucleus. Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

It’s comet ahoy! for the Stardust spacecraft, which is on its way to a Valentine’s Day meetup with comet Tempel 1. The images above were taken on Jan. 18 and 19 from a distance of 26.3 million kilometers (16.3 million miles), and 25.4 million kilometers (15.8 million miles). On Feb. 14, Stardust will fly within about 200 kilometers (124 miles) of the comet’s nucleus and for the first time we’ll get a second closeup look at Tempel 1.

“We were there in 2005 with the Deep Impact spacecraft, said Stardust-NExT Project Manager Tim Larson, speaking on today’s 365 Days of Astronomy podcast, “and this is a golden opportunity. It’s the first time we’ve ever been able to revisit a comet on a second pass near the sun.”
(…)
Read the rest of Comet Tempel 1 Now in StardustNeXT’s Field of View (632 words)


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Stardust-NExT spacecraft prepares for Valentine’s Day comet rendezvous

Astronomy Magazine News Article – Released:1/20/2011
Astronomy.com News – Presented by Astronomy Magazine

Stardust NExT Targets Valentines Day Encounter with Comet Tempel 1

Stardust-NExT Spacecraft & Comet Tempel 1. Artist rendering of Stardust-NExT spacecraft nearing Comet Tempel 1 for upcoming flyby on February, 14, 2011. Credit: NASA
See video and graphics below of Jan 19, 2011 Media briefing from the Science Team about plans for the cometary encounter

After a more than decade long journey of 6 billion kilometers, hopes are high for a celestial date in space between an icy comet and a thrusting probe on Valentine’s Day 2011. The rendezvous in space between NASA’s approaching Stardust-NExT spacecraft and Comet Tempel 1 takes place nearly on the exact opposite side of the Sun on Feb 14, 2011 at approximately 11:37 p.m. EST (8:37 p.m. PST).

The top science goal is to find out “how much the comet’s surface has changed between two close passages to the sun” since it was last visited in 2005, said principal investigator Joe Veverka of Cornell University, Ithaca, N,Y at a media briefing today, Jan 19, at NASA Headquarters. Indeed it’s the first time in history that a comet has been visited twice by space probes from Earth.

The lead scientists and engineers outlined the plans for the cometary flyby at the briefing. See a video of the entire briefing below. (…)
Read the rest of Stardust NExT Targets Valentines Day Encounter with Comet Tempel 1 (1,045 words)


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Post tags: Comet Wild 2, Comets, deep impact, NASA, Stardust, STARDUST-NExT, Temple 1

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Get ready for a naked-eye comet

Astronomy Magazine News Article – Released:9/20/2010
Astronomy.com News – Presented by Astronomy Magazine

SOHO spots 2000th comet

Astronomy Magazine News Article – Released:12/29/2010
Astronomy.com News – Presented by Astronomy Magazine

SOHO: World’s Greatest Comet Finder

SkyandTelescope.com’s Most Recent Articles

SOHO: World’s Greatest Comet Finder

SkyandTelescope.com’s Most Recent News Stories

Catalina Sky Survey discovers possible extinct comet

Astronomy Magazine News Article – Released:12/27/2010
Astronomy.com News – Presented by Astronomy Magazine

Bright Prospects for Comet Elenin?

SkyandTelescope.com’s Most Recent Observing Stories

Bright Prospects for Comet Elenin?

SkyandTelescope.com’s Most Recent Articles

Hubble probes comet 103P/Hartley 2 in preparation for flyby

Astronomy Magazine News Article – Released:10/6/2010
Astronomy.com News – Presented by Astronomy Magazine

Gas and Snow Jets from Comet Hartley 2

Unusual jets have been discovered emanating from Comet Hartley 2. Unusual jets have been discovered emanating from Comet Hartley 2.



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Comet Hartley 2: Full of Surprises

SkyandTelescope.com’s Most Recent Articles

Spacecraft sees cosmic snowstorm during comet encounter

Astronomy Magazine News Article – Released:11/19/2010
Astronomy.com News – Presented by Astronomy Magazine

Comet Hartley 2: Full of Surprises

SkyandTelescope.com’s Most Recent News Stories

Primordial dry ice fuels comet jets

Astronomy Magazine News Article – Released:11/11/2010
Astronomy.com News – Presented by Astronomy Magazine

700 Kilometers Below Comet Hartley 2

What kind of comet is this? What kind of comet is this?



APOD

Comet Hartley 2 Flyby

Follow these 5 frames clockwise starting from the top left to track Follow these 5 frames clockwise starting from the top left to track



APOD

New Binocular Comet in the Morning Sky

SkyandTelescope.com’s Most Recent Observing Stories

A newly discovered comet glows in the morning sky

Astronomy Magazine News Article – Released:11/5/2010
Astronomy.com News – Presented by Astronomy Magazine

New Binocular Comet in the Morning Sky

SkyandTelescope.com’s Most Recent Articles

Deep Impact Flyby spacecraft images Comet 103P/Hartley

Astronomy Magazine News Article – Released:11/4/2010
Astronomy.com News – Presented by Astronomy Magazine

A Comet that Gives Twice?

A green and red Orionid meteor striking the sky below Milky Way and to the right of Venus. Zodiacal light is also seen at the image The trail appears slightly curved due to edge distortion in the lens. Taken by Mila Zinkova

A green and red Orionid meteor striking the sky below Milky Way and to the right of Venus. Zodiacal light is also seen at the image The trail appears slightly curved due to edge distortion in the lens. Taken by Mila Zinkova

While historically, meteor showers were portents of ill omens, we know today that they are the remnants of ejecta from comets entering our atmosphere. Many showers have had their parent comets identified. But a new study is suggesting that two meteor showers, the December Monocerotids and the November Orionids, may share the same parent.

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Read the rest of A Comet that Gives Twice? (532 words)


© jvois for Universe Today, 2010. | Permalink | 3 comments | Add to del.icio.us
Post tags: Comets, Meteor Showers

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