When a Comet Loses Its Tail?

What Happens When a Comet Loses Its Tail? 


Ison 

It's difficult to predict exactly what will happen when the potentially great Comet ISON makes a sharp turn around the sun on Thanksgiving Day. But one thing is certain: The journey will be dangerous.

At less than 730,000 miles from the sun's surface, solar eruptions could rock the icy comet. Experts with NASA say lessons from another comet's tail-clipping encounter with the sun in 2007 presents a forbidding example of what could happen to Comet ISON.

That lesson comes from Comet Encke, which faithfully completes one orbit around the sun every 3.3 years and is one of the most studied comets in history. When it approached the sun in 2007, a coronal mass ejection, or CME, burst from our star and struck the comet, tearing off its tail.


"For one thing, the year 2007 was near solar minimum," Vourlidas said in a statement from NASA. "Solar activity was low. Now, however, we are near the peak of the solar cycle and eruptions are more frequent."

Vourlidas was referring to the sun's 11-year weather cycle. The solar maximum is typically marked by an increase in sunspots, the dark, temporary regions on the sun's surface that can give rise to CMEs.

When Comet ISON approaches the sun, it might be headed for a "hot zone" of CMEs, said Karl Battams, an astronomer at the Naval Research Lab who is also watching the comet. On Thursday, Comet ISON is expected to pass over the sun's equator on the same side of a recently active cluster of sunspots.
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I would absolutely love to see Comet ISON get hit by a big CME
I would absolutely love to see Comet ISON get hit by a big CME," Battams said in a NASA statement. "It won't hurt the comet, but it would give us a chance to study extreme interactions with the comet's tail."prodigysIN

Because the gas inside a CME is not very dense, the impact of this magnetized cloud of plasma would not be strong enough to tear apart a comet's core, according to NASA. A CME could, however, yank the comet's fragile tail.

And while the CME that hit Comet Encke back in 2007 was quite slow, Vourlidas believes a CME slamming into Comet ISON could have a more dramatic effect.

"Any CME that hits Comet ISON close to the sun would very likely be faster, driving a shock wave with a much stronger magnetic field," Vourlidas explained in a statement. "Frankly, we can't predict what would happen."

Both Comet ISON and Comet Encke are in the field of view STEREO-A's Heliospheric Imager, their tails waving back and forth with the solar wind. According to NASA, it is possible that both could be hit by the same CME, which would give researchers a chance see how these objects would react to widely separated locations.

While ISON has slipped out of view for skywatchers on the ground, NASA's space-based fleet of solar observatories will be watching when ISON's close encounter, including STEREO-A and STEREO-B, the Solar Dynamics Observatory and the Solar and Heliophysics Observatory.


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