Friday, December 13, 2013

Is Anything Left of ISON? Spacecraft Continue to Monitor Comet’s Remains

Is Anything Left of ISON? Spacecraft Continue to Monitor Comet’s Remains:
This images from the STEREO A spacecraft shows Comet ISON (upper right) still visible on Dec. 3, 2013. Credit: NASA.
Astrophoto: Star Trails Over Kitt Peak
This images from the STEREO A spacecraft shows Comet ISON (upper right) still visible on Dec. 3, 2013. Credit: NASA.
Could Comet ISON possibly still be alive? The latest high-resolution images available from the STEREO spacecraft are still showing some remains of the comet, although each day seems to show less and less activity. “If anything of ISON’s nucleus is left, it’s an inactive husk of a nucleus now,” Karl Battams from the Comet ISON Observing Campaign told Universe Today. “The comet remnant is fading fast in the STEREO data.”
Carey Lisse, also from CIOC was a bit more hopeful. In a web posting yesterday (Dec. 4) he said, “At this time, scientists are not sure how much of the comet survived intact. We may be seeing emission from rubble and debris in the comet’s trail, along its orbit, or we may be seeing the resumption of cometary activity from a sizable nucleus-sized chunk of ISON.”
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Read the rest of Is Anything Left of ISON? Spacecraft Continue to Monitor Comet’s Remains (462 words)

© nancy for Universe Today, 2013. |Permalink |One comment |
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