The Splintering of Comet 17P/Holmes During a Mega-Outburst |
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Summary
Astronomers from the University of California, Los Angeles and the
University of Hawaii have discovered multiple fragments ejected during
the largest cometary outburst ever witnessed. Rachel Stevenson, Jan
Kleyna and David Jewitt began observing comet Holmes in October 2007
soon after it was reported that the small (3.6 km wide) body had
brightened by a million times in less than a day. They continued
observing for several weeks after the outburst using the Canada-
France-Hawaii Telescope in Hawaii and watched as the dust cloud ejected
by the comet grew to be
larger than the
Sun.
The astronomers examined a sequence of images taken over nine nights in
November 2007 using a digital filter that enhances sharp
discontinuities within images. The filter, called a Laplacian filter,
is particularly good at picking out faint small-scale features that
would otherwise remain undetected against the bright background of the
expanding comet. They found numerous small objects that moved radially
away from the nucleus at speeds up to 125 m/s (280 mph). These objects
were too bright to simply be bare rocks, but instead were more like
mini-comets creating their own dust clouds as the ice sublimated from
their surfaces.
Caption: Animated movie showing the expansion of the coma
of comet Holmes over 9 nights in 2007 November. The images have
been spatially filtered to reveal fine structure. Inside the
expanding envelope of the dust coma, a set of faint
objects and their associated dust trails can be seen receding
from the nucleus. Black/white circles that jump from image to
image are background stars.
While cometary outbursts are common, their causes are unknown. One
possibility is that internal pressure built up as the comet moved
closer to the Sun and sub-surface ices evaporated. The pressure
eventually became too great and part of the surface broke away,
releasing a huge cloud of dust and gas, as well as larger fragments.
Surprisingly, the solid nucleus of comet Holmes survived the
outburst and continued on its orbit, seemingly unperturbed.
The orbit period of comet Holmes is about 6 years, putting it in the
class of Jupiter Family Comets whose orbits are strongly influenced by
Jupiter. These objects are thought to have spent most of the last 4.5
billion years orbiting the Sun beyond Neptune, in a region known as the
Kuiper Belt.
Holmes probably was deflected into its present orbit
within the last few thousand years and is losing mass as it evaporates
in the heat of the Sun. In another few thousand years it is likely
either to hit the Sun or a planet, be ejected from the Solar system, or
simply die by running out of gas.
The comet is now moving away but will return to its
closest approach to the Sun in 2014, when astronomers will examine it
for signs of further outbursts.
Caption: (Left) Image of comet Holmes from the
3.6-meter Canada-France-Hawaii telescope on Mauna Kea showing the
large expanding dust coma. On the left, a 'raw' image is shown, in which
the brightness reflects the distribution of dust in the coma of the comet
(the nucleus is in the bright, point-like region to the upper left of center). On the
right is shown the same image after application of the Laplacian spatial
filter, to emphasize fine structures. The white/black circular objects are
background stars enhanced by the Laplacian filter.
[The same image is
available here as a 300
dpi tif file.]
David Jewitt
Close examination of wide-field, high resolution images of outbursting
comet 17P/Holmes show a set of fragments which rapidly recede from
the nucleus and fade.
Comet | Jewitt | Kuiper |
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