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(meteorobs) [Fwd: Breaking up is hard to do, even for a comet]



I hope this is not too far afield to our group.  However the traffic has
been very light lately anyhow.    Robert G.

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MEDIA RELATIONS OFFICE
JET PROPULSION LABORATORY
CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
PASADENA, CALIF. 91109 TELEPHONE (818) 354-5011
http://www.jpl.nasadot gov

Contact: Martha J. Heil (818) 354-0850

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                         May 17, 2001

BREAKING UP IS HARD TO DO, EVEN FOR A COMET

     Scientists at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, 
Calif., helped to piece together what happened when Comet 
LINEAR (C/1999 S4) disintegrated in July 2000, and their 
results will appear today in a special issue of Science 
featuring studies of the comet.

     Scientists watched the comet break up when it was nearly 
115 million kilometers (72 million miles) from the Sun.  
NASA's Hubble Space Telescope and the Very Large Telescope 
took pictures at different resolutions and different times. 
>From the pictures, scientists learned the details of how the 
comet broke up. The team was led by Dr. Hal Weaver, an 
astronomer at the Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Md. 
The fragments have spread out, to disappear forever into deep 
space. The mini-comets that the scientists saw ranged from 
about some 50 to more than 100 meters (165 to more than 300 
feet) across.  Today, the pieces will be roughly 600 million 
kilometers (400 million miles) from Earth.

     "One question we tried to answer was, 'Did everything 
happen at one time, or did the pieces of the comet slowly 
fragment off?'" said Dr. Zdenek Sekanina of JPL, the paper's 
second author. He identified some of the fragments in the 
pictures from Hubble and the Very Large Telescope, determined 
their sizes and relative motions and the times they separated. 
"We found that the comet's breakup was gradual but episodic. 
Also, the distances among the mini-comets grew as time went 
by, and we wanted to find out how rapidly."

     There are two forces working on the different distances 
between the mini-comets, Sekanina said.  One is that the 
fragments broke off at different times.  The other is that 
gases flowing from the broken chunks of dust and ice were 
propelling them to different speeds depending on their size.

     Sekanina predicted that the tail would become a narrow, 
bright band, made from the sunlight-reflecting dust released 
as the comet crumbled. While the new tail was relatively 
bright at first, the comet's original head disappeared, 
confusing calculations of the orbit.  The last pictures of the 
tail were taken in the second half of August 2000, about four 
weeks after the event. Then the comet's remains vanished 
forever.

     Dr. Michael Keesey of JPL calculated the comet's orbit, 
its distance from the Sun, its probable origin and its angle 
to Earth. It was a long period comet, born in the Oort cloud, 
which is postulated to extend from outside the orbit of the 
farthest planet, Pluto, to about 30 trillion kilometers (20 
trillion miles) from the Sun. It took comet LINEAR about 
60,000 years to travel once around the Sun.

     The comet, popularly called LINEAR for the site of its 
discovery, the Lincoln Near Earth Asteroid Research, 
Lexington, Mass., was one of several dozen comets discovered 
in this way. 

     Another comet discovered by LINEAR, C/2001 A2, recently 
broke up as it was nearing the Sun.  It was observed to 
undergo an outburst in late March 2001, which may have 
signalled the splitting.  Breaking up may be a common end for 
comets, Keesey said.

     JPL is managed by the California Institute of Technology 
in Pasadena for NASA. A picture of the comet is available at 
http://www.jpl.nasadot gov/pictures/comet .

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05/17/01 MJH
2001-102


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