Comet ISON Nears Date With Sun 45
riverat1 writes "Now visible in the morning sky, comet ISON will swing around the Sun on November 28. ISON will pass 730,000 km above the surface of the Sun at closest approach (Mercury's perihelion distance is 46 million km). If it survives its near brush with the Sun it could provide a spectacular sky show from December into January. This NASA timeline shows that ISON will be the most observed comet ever as instruments ranging from a balloon carried telescope to the Hubble Space Telescope to the STEREO satellites will be brought into play. Lowell Observatory astronomer Matthew Knight lays out three possibilities for ISON: spontaneous disintegration before it gets to the Sun (less than 1% chance); disintegration as it rounds the Sun; or survival. If it survives, its closest approach to Earth will be on December 26 at about 1/3 of an AU."
most observed comet ever (Score:5, Interesting)
How visible will it be to the unaided eye? And where will it be the most visible? I was in southern Thailand when this comet [wikipedia.org] came by, and was puzzled when the newspapers said it was "disappointing". It was the brightest thing in the night sky except the moon where I was.
Re:most observed comet ever (Score:5, Interesting)
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Actually, ISON is still on its way towards the sun. And it has been observed with the naked eye. Still not a great comet, though.
It could be the repeat of Comet Linear (Score:1)
The Hubble Telescope, back in August 2000, captured the broken remnants of the of the Comet Linear which exploded
http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/archive/releases/2000/27 [hubblesite.org]
Picture of the remnants is at http://imgsrc.hubblesite.org/hu/db/images/hs-2000-27-a-print.jpg [hubblesite.org]
Some Info: Dark Sky vs. Twilight Viewing (Score:3)
Wikipedia says that thing was fourth magnitude when visible in the night sky: that's not very bright. But it can *seem* bright in good dark skies. Dark skies were, of course, much more common in the seventies than they are now. Light pollution eats comet tails for breakfast.
Now, few comments (nice typo...COMETS) are really impressive in the night sky. Hale-Bopp was one exception. Most are impressive only close to the sun - this was true of Kohoutek, and will be true of ISON if it survives.
The predictions fo
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no, the 70s were the era of smog. I was there
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And hallucinogens.
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How visible will it be to the unaided eye?
My guess? It won't. At least in the perihelion. Between the 0.5 degree or so of angular separation from the Sun disk and the optical effects of our atmosphere, there won't be much to see for your common Earthly gaper. Of course, the comet tail will be spectacular. But the comet itself? Nah.
Re:most observed comet ever (Score:5, Informative)
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Thanks, Shadowfacts. Now shut up.
Shooting comets (Score:2)
20s is far too long at 70-200 mm, you'll turn the stars into streaks.
Set to the highest ISO you can, set the exposure to about 2s...3s, take about 100 shots, and stack them (lots of free apps available, or photoshop, etc.)
You want the best image, that's how you get it.
For instance, here's a shot of a MUCH dimmer and smaller comet made just that way at 200mm; check out how you can see both the ion and dust tails:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/48447736@N00/4695946008/ [flickr.com]
(you can see that the 2.5s exposure there wa
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I've heard up to 15x brighter than the moon. But it's all speculation. They do not know how much, if any of the comet will survive its encounter with the sun. It's possible it could be anywhere from barely visible or extremely spectacular. We're just going to have to wait and see. I really hope it's a dazzler though. My sons 5yrs old and I can't even put into words how fantastic an event that would be for him. It's the kind of thing that would spawn a whole generation of scientists.
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I've heard up to 15x brighter than the moon. But it's all speculation. They do not know how much, if any of the comet will survive its encounter with the sun. It's possible it could be anywhere from barely visible or extremely spectacular. We're just going to have to wait and see. I really hope it's a dazzler though. My sons 5yrs old and I can't even put into words how fantastic an event that would be for him. It's the kind of thing that would spawn a whole generation of scientists.
The "brighter than the moon" thing was banded around by the press, but AFAIK no reputable scientists ever expected it to get to lunar brightness.
ISON places exclamation mark: is in outburst! (Score:1)
See this link for some stunning imaging by amateurs: http://www.cometisonnews.com/ [cometisonnews.com]
and this one for some serious work by 'just' an amateur: http://brucegary.net/ISON/ [brucegary.net]
and this one which was one of the earliest to plot data (that I knew of): http://www.aerith.net/comet/catalog/2012S1/2012S1.html [aerith.net]
Personally, from its outburst a couple of days ago, I expect it to become negative magnitude easily (the more negative, the brighter).
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Considering 1/3 of an AU is only slightly closer than Mars' closest approach to Earth, and several million miles more than Venus' closest approach to Earth, I'd say it's close enough to 0 to be considered a rounding error.
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O come all ye faithful (Score:2, Funny)
Day early, day late...either way, looks like you just follow the damn thing, find some kid in the straw, and call him the sone of a deity.
My bet: he'll be covered in meatballs and pasta.
"Spontaneous"? (Score:5, Insightful)
It's bombarded so aggressively, it's having its surface ripped off it to create that enormous tail, and it's suffering from ever greater gravitational tidal forces - that's about as far as you can get from happening without apparent external infuence.
Re: "Spontaneous"? (Score:5, Funny)
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"In hindsight Comet LINEAR began falling apart in June when the comet unexpectedly brightened, indicating an outburst of dust. Powerful gas jets nudged the comet along a chaotic path, another indication of a very volatile activity."
At that point, note that the comet had a very visible tail - it was being pounded constantly by the solar wind.
If you think "unexpected" and "spontaneous" mean the same thing, please inve
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Since this is ISON's first encounter with the Sun it's unclear how well consolidated the comet is. As I said less than 1% of comets fall apart like this before they get to the Sun but you don't know if it will until it happens (or doesn't).
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It's bombarded so aggressively, it's having its surface ripped off it to create that enormous tail, and it's suffering from ever greater gravitational tidal forces - that's about as far as you can get from happening without apparent external infuence.
This is what bugs me about the prediction of closest Earth approach "if it survives".
Now, I'm not sure about this... but it is necessarily on a hyperbolic trajectory. Does the trajectory stay approximately the same if it breaks up and therefore changes mass? I.e., if it's a relatively passive breakup (by no means a given), would all the pieces continue in the same trajectory? Or is it altered?
Re:"Spontaneous"? (Score:4, Informative)
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The centre of mass of the fragments will continue in the same path initially.
Good answer. I should have thought of that.
A comet visible in late December? (Score:1)
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You know, you can contribute. Find yourself a sociologist and get them tickets to Texas or Alabama.
Comet ISDN? (Score:2, Funny)
Old news. Tell me when Comet ADSL is heading our way.
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ISON, not ISDN -- Inter Stellar Object Notation .
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Double-whoosh on you!
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ISON, not ISDN -- Inter Stellar Object Notation .
Actually, it's International Scientific Optical Network [wikipedia.org], and the comets name is C/2012 S1 or Comet Nevski–Novichonok.
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I wondered why the comet was spelled in all caps. But this now leaves me wondering why the name is based on star programming.
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Still be a comet afterward? (Score:2)
What distinguishes comets is not only their insanely eccentric orbits but also their predominantly icy makeup, right? Will it still have any ice or other volatiles after such a close pass with the sun? If all that volatile mass burns off, won't that significantly alter its orbit thereafter?
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I admit that I don't know enough about the mechanics to know the answer off-hand.
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The concept of perihelion appears, from my last few minutes of Googling and Wikipedia-reading, to be replete with amibiguous or downright contradictory diagrams.
The comets in the video are coming in from under the plane of the system (see thickness of line and slow rotation of viewpoint), so aren't as close to the sun as they appear to be.
ison... isnt that the evil twin of json? (Score:2)
with all the *son technologies, it is hard to keep track :p