A Change of Guard

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Friday, 4 January 2013

Brilliant Comet, Brighter Than Full Moon, Making Debut In 2013

December 27, 2012
Image Credit: Giovanni Benintende / Shutterstock

NB: The appearance of a major comet in the night sky had traditionally been taken to be an omen of impending end to political reigns and the beginning of a new era. The last time the Khmer people had witnessed this cosmic harbinger of sea changing event was just prior to the fall of the hated Pol Pot regime in 1979 - School of Vice


Lee Rannals for redOrbit.com – Your Universe Online

A once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to gaze upon the stars will be had next year by thousands of backyard astronomers who wish to catch a glimpse of the comet of the century.

Comet Ison has yet to earn its spotlight in the media, but soon enough it will be the trending topic among all the search engines.

The comet, which was discovered by two Russian astronomers, will be “the biggest star of 2013 and “brighter than a full moon,” according to David Whitehouse, an author and astronomer.

Ison has been traveling for millions of years from the Oort cloud to reach Earth. The comet’s surface is very dark, and it is a few tens of miles across.

Whitehouse says if you jumped into the air while on the surface of the comet, you could leap 20 miles up, and it would take you over a week to come back down.

By the end of the summer next year the comet will become visible in small telescopes and binoculars. A few months later, by October, it will be passing Mars and the surface will shift, with the surface of the rock responding to thermal shock.

As the comet passes the orbit of Earth, the gas and dust geysers will gather force, and the space around Ison will become brilliant as the ice below the surface turns into gas and erupts. Once this happens, it will be reflecting the light of the sun.



By late November next year, the comet will be visible to the unaided eye just after dark in the same direction as the setting Sun. The comet’s tail could stretch like a searchlight into the sky above the horizon.

Ison will then swing rapidly around the Sun, passing within two million miles of it, which is closer than any planet ever does. The comet will be able to be seen to an “unaided eye” for months.

When Ison gets close in its approach to the Sun, it could become intensely bright, but at this point it will be difficult and dangerous to see without special instruments.

While comets can be a rare site to the backyard astronomers, Ison will not be the only space rock that will be visible next year. According to Whitehouse, another comet, called 2014 L4, was discovered last year and will be making a significant appearance in the evening sky in March and April, acting as the opening act for Ison.


Source: Lee Rannals for redOrbit.com - Your Universe Online

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Jerry ISON on 2012 December 27 at 18:17 asked: My name is ISON and I am wondering if anyone reading this knows why this comet was named ISON ?
Reply by ↓
espenak on 2012 December 27 at 23:13 said: Comet ISON was discovered using the 0.4-metre (16 in) reflector of the I-nternational S-cientific O- ptical N-etwork (ISON) near Kislovodsk, Russia.
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COMET AND IT ORIGINS

Astronomers sometimes call comets “dirty snowballs” or “icy mudballs.” These odd names come from the comets’ makeup. Comets are basically made of a mix of ice—water ice or frozen gases—
and space dust.Comets can be described as having two main parts—the nucleus, or hard center, and the tail, which may extend out for millions of miles. The nucleus is made up of frozen gas, ice, dust,
and some rocks. The tails are usually created when the comet moves too close to the Sun. As a result, some of the comet’s frozen material changes to gas. The gas trails behind the moving comet
(in the direction parallel to the solar wind ?).
One of the big mysteries about comets was their place of origin. In 1950, Dutch astronomer Jan Oort presented the idea that there was an immense cloud surrounding our Solar System.
This cloud is more than 18 trillion miles (30 trillion km) fromthe Sun. Within the cloud are unknown numbers of comets. One estimate places the number at six trillion, or even higher.
(Author : Josepha Sherman)
Personally I believed that comets are the boomerangs threw by the youngest son of Mekhala Oort !!!