Comets

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Comets

The name comet comes from the Greek word "kometes" meaning long-haired, a long-haired star.

It was once believed that comets were "foretellers of disaster". The solar system contains millions of asteroids and comets as well as the nine planets and the sun. However, despite their number very little is known about these celestial bodies.

The photograph shown here and other comet photographs and posters are available at this link Buy Posters at AllPosters.com

What is a Comet?

A comet is a small icy celestial body that orbits around the sun. It is made up of four parts. At the centre is the nucleus of the comet. This is the solid object upon which the sun's force of gravity acts, creating the highly elliptical orbit of a comet. The nucleus is made up of rock, ice and dust. It is the nucleus of a comet that interests scientists. The material which makes up the nucleus is "left over" from the big bang and the creation of the planets. It is the excess that was not needed to make stars and planets. Now this excess matter orbits the stars of the universe. The nucleus contains most of the mass of the comet, but is small in comparison to the other parts of the comet, ranging from about one to ten kilometres across.

The next part of the comet is the coma, a roughly spherical ball of gas that surrounds the comet's nucleus. The coma is comprised of water vapour, carbon dioxide gas, ammonia, dust and neutral gases that have sublimed from the solid nucleus.

The tail of a comet is in fact made up of two different tails. The first is known as the dust tail and is a stream of dust particles knocked off of the comet. This tail flows behind the comet, along the path of motion. The second tail is known as the ion tail. An ion is a charged particle. It is created by solar wind, which is a stream of ions flowing from the sun. These ions ionise parts of the coma, pushing them away from the comet, forming a long tail that always points away from the sun. This tail fades the further away from the sun the comet gets. This is why astronomers can have no idea how many comets there are that pass through our solar system. The tail caused by the sun is the main detectable characteristic of a comet, but once the comet has passed the portion of its orbit close to the sun it becomes fairly undetectable as the tail disappears.

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Hubblecast 01: The Comet Galaxy

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  • AnthonyAltorenna Aug 27, 2011 @ 9:06 am | delete
    Nicely done! I've always been interested in comets, and I am still amazed that even ancient civilizations could see and track comets accross the night sky - without telescopes!

Comets in the News

The star that fell
Back in the 1700s the famous astronomer Edmund Halley, who predicted the return of the great comet which now bears his name, also first noticed that Arcturus is moving across the sky in relation to the other stars. While our sun and most other stars ...
Backyard Universe: Venus crossing sun as rare as it gets
Back in the early 1700s, astronomer Edmund Halley (of Halley's Comet fame) determined that if the passage of Venus across the face of the sun could be precisely timed, the distance to the sun could be determined. That 93 million-mile distance wasn't ...
Area astronomy club opens its time capsule
The clippings detailed the two-year construction process of the observatory, as well as the passing of Halley's Comet. The comet last appeared in the sky in 1986 and isn't due to come back until 2061. Old issues of the monthly magazine Sky & Telescope ...
Recommended: The World at Night finds beauty in darkness and light
This year we had many images of the great Comet Lovejoy which made a spectacular display in the southern skies during December 2011. It was a surprise to astronomers as well, as this icy body passed through the hot atmosphere of the sun (the solar ...

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Comet Links

Fun With Cometology
Comets capture our imagination. Today you can study and measure comets and contribute valuable data to the science community. Read this article to find out how.

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