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Twin Comets

Astronomers Learn New Clues About Earth's Origin by Observing Twin Comets

May 1, 2004

For the first time in nearly a century, a pair of comets will be visible to the naked eye. Astronomers are studying the chemical composition of these comets to learn new clues about the origin and composition of the solar system, including our planet Earth.

What is a comet?

Science behind the news is funded by a generous grant from the NSF

Comets are essentially large, dirty snowballs. They are made of ice and frozen gases, mixed with rocky material and dust. A typical comet has an ice core called the nucleus (shown here in a stereo image), a surrounding cloud of gas called a coma, a curved dust tail, and a straight ion tail. When far from the Sun, a comet's nucleus is very cold and its material is frozen solid inside. But when a comet gets close to the Sun, the surface of the nucleus warms up. Evaporating gases carry small grains of dust with them, forming the coma. The ion tail is also formed as the comet nears the Sun. The solar wind blows the dust in the coma and blows it back behind the nucleus; the ion tail is like a large windsock, with the tail extending in the direction the solar wind is blowing.

As many as a dozen new comets are discovered each year, and on any given night, two or three dozen comets may be visible to professional astronomers at the world's largest observatories. The so-called "Great Comets" -- those that can be easily seen by the naked eye -- appear about once every ten years.

Build your own telescope!

You can make your own telescope with two magnifying glasses, an empty paper towel roll, and duct tape. Hold one glass between you and a printed piece of paper; the image will look blurry. Place the second glass between your eye and the first glass and move forward or backward until the image comes into focus. Have a friend measure the distance between the two glasses and write it down.

Cut a slot in the cardboard tube about one inch from the front opening to hold one of the magnifying glasses. Cut a second slot for the second magnifying glass, the same distance from the first slot as your friend wrote down. Place the glasses in their slots and tape them in place with duct tape. Now you can look at the moon, some stars, or even birds.


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Did you know?...

  • Comets may be the oldest, most primitive bodies in the solar system, and are the building blocks of planetary systems around other stars.
  • When comets impact the Earth and other planets, they can cause major climate changes; a comet may have caused the extinction of the dinosaurs.
  • There are Chinese records of Halley's Comet dating back to 240 B.C.

More information on this story

Martha J. Heil
mheil@aip.org
American Institute of Physics
Tel: 301-209-3088