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Hubble
Sees Comet Linear Blow its Top
These three photographs taken with NASA's Hubble Space
Telescope chronicle a violent outburst in the life of comet LINEAR,
also known as C/1999 S4. The orbiting observatory's Space Telescope
Imaging Spectrograph tracked the streaking comet for two days, July
5 to 7, capturing a dramatic leap in its brightness [left image];
followed by seeing a wave of newly created dust from the outburst
flowing into the coma, a shell of dust surrounding the core [middle
image]; and culminating in the discovery of a castoff chunk of material
from the nucleus sailing along its tail [the bright dot trailing
behind the comet in the picture at right]. The white region represents
the brightest part of the coma. The nucleus cannot be seen in these
images because it is about a mile or so across, which is too small
for the Hubble telescope to see.
When the Hubble telescope snapped these visible-light
images, comet LINEAR was 74 million miles (120 million km) from
Earth. At 6:32 p.m. EDT July 5 [left image], Hubble watched as the
light within a 50-mile-wide region surrounding the core brightened
by about 50 percent in less than four hours. By 5:20 p.m. EDT the
next day [middle image], that region was a third less luminous than
at its peak the previous day, as the dust expelled from the core
during the outburst moved farther out in the coma. By 7:04 p.m.
EDT on the final day [right image], the comet's brightness was back
to normal -- about one-seventh less luminous than at peak level.
The chunk of material seen in the final picture is
roughly 290 miles (470 km) from the nucleus and appears to be moving
down the tail at about 6 miles per hour. The fragment's slow pace
indicates that it could be quite large (possibly house-size), but
accurate estimates for the sizes of the chunk and of the core require
further analyses of the Hubble images and data from other observatories.
Credits: NASA,
H. Weaver and P. Feldman (Johns Hopkins University), M. A'Hearn
(University of Maryland), C. Arpigny (Liege University), M. Combi
(University of Michigan), M. Festou (Observatoire Midi-Pyrenees),
and G.-P. Tozzi (Arcetri Observatory)
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