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LunaSea

(2,893 posts)
Tue Sep 25, 2012, 01:10 PM Sep 2012

Sun-Diving comet could put on a big show next year

Astronomy forums are buzzing with speculation about newly-discovered Comet C/2012 S1 (ISON). Currently located beyond the orbit of Jupiter, Comet ISON is heading for a very close encounter with the sun next year. In Nov. 2013, it will pass less than 0.012 AU (1.8 million km) from the solar surface. The fierce heating it experiences then could turn the comet into a bright naked-eye object.

Much about this comet--and its ultimate fate--remains unknown. "At this stage we're just throwing darts at the board," says Karl Battams of the NASA-supported Sungrazer Comet Project, who lays out two possibilities:

"In the best case, the comet is big, bright, and skirts the sun next November. It would be extremely bright -- negative magnitudes maybe -- and naked-eye visible for observers in the Northern Hemisphere for at least a couple of months."

"Alternately, comets can and often do fizzle out! Comet Elenin springs to mind as a recent example, but there are more famous examples of comets that got the astronomy community seriously worked up, only to fizzle. This is quite possibly a 'new' comet coming in from the Oort cloud, meaning this could be its first-ever encounter with the Sun. If so, with all those icy volatiles intact and never having been truly stressed (thermally and gravitationally), the comet could well disrupt and dissipate weeks or months before reaching the sun."

"Either of the above scenarios is possible, as is anything in between," Battams says. "There's no doubt that Comet ISON will be closely watched. Because the comet is so far away, however, our knowledge probably won't develop much for at least a few more months."

Meanwhile, noted comet researcher John Bortle has pointed out a curious similarity between the orbit of Comet ISON and that of the Great Comet of 1680. "Purely as speculation," he says, "perhaps the two bodies could have been one a few revolutions ago."


http://spaceweather.com/

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Sun-Diving comet could put on a big show next year (Original Post) LunaSea Sep 2012 OP
that would be a special thing phantom power Sep 2012 #1
Kohoutek was exciting for me. I didn't have a telescope and littlemissmartypants Sep 2012 #2
"Comets are like cats... LunaSea Sep 2012 #3
I hope this sky show pans out! Odin2005 Sep 2012 #4
A Sun-Diving comet? How will it survive the dip? Vincardog Sep 2012 #5

littlemissmartypants

(22,632 posts)
2. Kohoutek was exciting for me. I didn't have a telescope and
Tue Sep 25, 2012, 02:35 PM
Sep 2012

no way to get one and turns out didn't need one. At the time I didn't know that. I was just so amazed. No one in my family would come outside to watch it with me but I can still see it in my mind's eye.

LunaSea

(2,893 posts)
3. "Comets are like cats...
Tue Sep 25, 2012, 09:16 PM
Sep 2012

They have tails and do whatever they want to do"
David Levy

Comet C/2012 S1 (ISON) will get to within 0.012AU of the Sun (extremely close) at the end of November 2013 and then to ~0.4AU from Earth at the beginning of January 2014! According to its orbit, this comet might become a naked-eye object in the period November 2013 - January 2014. And it might reach a negative magnitude at the end of November 2013.

http://remanzacco.blogspot.it/2012/09/new-comet-c2012-s1-ison.html

I find the prospect of a comet visible in daylight rather exciting!

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