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IRON AND ICE
A Naked-Eye Comet Invites Itself To The March Sky, 2013
by Staff Writers
Paris, France (SPX) Mar 08, 2013


February 27, 2013 : Comet Pan-Starrs low in the sky over Bridgetown, near Perth, Western Australia. The 4-second exposure at ISO 5000 was recorded with digital camera and a 400mm lens. Photo courtesy Jim Gifford.

It will appear in the west at sunset, from around the 8th to the 13th of March 2013, and will be visible to the naked eye up to the end of the month: comet Pan-STARRS C/2011 L4 will traverse Cetus, Pisces, Pegasus and Andromeda.

The scientists of the Paris Observatory are calculating its path. They have been following it since September 2012, using the large Nancay radio telescope (in the Cher region of France), the Herschel infrared space observatory, at the Pic-du-Midi Observatory (in the Pyrenees), and with the antennas at Bure (in the Alps), at Pico Veleta (Spain), and at Chajnantor (Chile).

At present in the southern hemisphere, this winter's-end guest will, on Friday the 8th of March 2013, make its appearance 5 degrees above the western horizon at sunset. It will then be 18h44, Paris time.

The last glimmer of civil twilight will last till 19h16, and the celestial object will in its turn hide itself below the horizon nine minutes later. To enjoy the sight, amateur astronomers will have to summon their patience and wait till March 13th. According to estimates, the comet will be as bright as the neighboring stars in the square of Pegasus.

Specialists from the Paris Observatory are advising members of the general public to find an appropriate place from which to see the comet: it should be dark, without surrounding illumination and cloudless, far from towns, if possible in the countryside with a clear view to the west. The diffuse tail of the comet, made of gas and dust, will grow from day to day. To see it well, binoculars or a telescope will be of help. Wandering across the celestial sphere, the vagrant will pass close to Mars, Uranus, the thin crescent Moon and the Andromeda galaxy.

The Comet
Pan-STARRS was discovered on June 8th 2011 with the 1.8-meter telescope of the Panoramic Survey Telescope And Rapid Response System (Pan-STARRS) at Haleakala, Maui, Hawaii. This is a new comet, never seen before , and which will make just one unique visit in our sky before being ejected into the depths of the galaxy.

Comets consist of a nucleus of ice and dust, dating from the very origin of the solar system. As they approach the Sun, they heat up. The ice evaporates. An extensive envelope , the atmosphere or coma, develops around the bright nucleus. It is drawn out into two enormous tails of gas (ionized molecules) and dust which can extend over millions of kilometers.

In contrast to their historic predecessors, modern comets are no longer seen as omens or sacred symbols. Halley's famous comet is on an obit such that it returns to the inner part of the solar system every 76 years: 1910, 1986, 2061...

Official Calculations
The calculation of the orbit made by Patrick Rocher, astronomer at Institut de Mecanique Celeste de Calcul des ephemerides IMCCE (Institute of Celestial Mechanics and Ephemeris Calculations) [1] of the Observatoire de Paris, is based on the data from 1385 worldwide observations made from the 21st of May 2011 to the 9th of February 2013.

The attractions of all the planets and the Sun have been taken into account, as well as the effects of Einstein's general relativity. The residual uncertainty in the position of the celestial body is estimated to be 0.34 second of arc: 1/6000th of the apparent diameter of the full Moon in the sky.

All in all, C/2011 will pass the Earth at a distance of 164 million kilometers on Tuesday, the 5th of March at 7 minutes and 33 seconds past 11, and will pass the Sun at a distance of 45 million kilometers on Sunday the 10th of March at 3 minutes and 12 seconds past 5 (Central European time). The estimates of its brightness are based on 300 to 700 observations.

Science on the Move
Francois Colas, CNRS research fellow at the IMCCE of the Observatoire de Paris, will be working from the 11th to the 17th of March with the 1-m telescope at the Pic-du-Midi observatory in the Pyrenees.

For its part, the team led by Dominique Bockelee-Morvan, CNRS research director, at Laboratoire d'etudes Spatiales et d'Instrumentation en Astrophysique LESIA [2] of the Observatoire de Paris had already detected the comet in September 2012 using ESA's European Herschel infrared telescope.

Furthermore, Jacques Crovisier and Pierre Colom, deputy astronomers, started tracking Pan-STARRS C/2011 L4 at about the same time using the 300 m wide Nancay radio telescope (Cher, region Center, in the neighborhood of Orleans, France) - this latter is a scientific unit of the Observatoire de Paris. They are interested in the OH radical, produced by the photodissociation of the water coming from the ice, and will thereby try to anticipate how the cometary activity will evolve over time.

15 Tons of Water...
The first result: the combined Herschel/Nancay results indicate that over 5.5 months, from the beginning of September to the end of February, the comet had increased by a factor of 100 its water vapor (H2O) production rate. It has risen from 140 kg/second to about 15 tons/second. And this is still liable to change for a certain time.

The group is now preparing a collaborative effort, using the new giant international array - the Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA), consisting of 56 antennas installed at an altitude of 5,000 meters on the Chajnantor plateau, in the Andes Cordillera in Chile.

At the same time, Nicolas Biver, CNRS research fellow, will be working with the 30-m antenna of the Institut de Radio Astronomie Millimetrique (IRAM), on the Pico Veleta, Andalousia, in Spain.

Finally, a colleague from the astrophysical laboratory of the Aix-Marseille University will complement the observations at these wavelengths using the six 15-m antennas on the Plateau de Bure, in the French Alps.

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Related Links
Paris Observatory
Asteroid and Comet Mission News, Science and Technology






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IRON AND ICE
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Comet 2013 A1 (Siding Spring) will make a very close approach to Mars in October 2014. The latest trajectory of comet 2013 A1 (Siding Spring) generated by the Near-Earth Object Program Office at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., indicates the comet will pass within 186,000 miles (300,000 kilometers) of Mars and there is a strong possibility that it might pass much closer. ... read more


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