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An extraordinary feat: NASA probe sent plunging into comet
By Frank Gaglioti
8 August 2005
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In earlier centuries, the rare arrival of a comet in the heavens
was often seen as a portent of doom. Now scientists are able to
undertake scientific expeditions to determine the make-up, chemical
and geological history of these astronomical phenomena, thought
to be relics from the earliest stages of the solar systems
formation.
On July 4, the NASA Deep Impact space probe released a copper
impactor that plunged headlong into the comet Tempel
1 releasing a plume of material from beneath the comets
surface. Scientists believe that an analysis of the comets
emissions will provide insights into the origin of the solar system
and possibly of life on earth.
Deep Impacts rendezvous with Tempel 1 near Mars
orbit was an astonishing feat of precision navigation. The comet
measures just 14.5 by 4.8 kilometres, was 134 million kilometres
from earth and travelling at 106,000 kilometres per hour. The
space vehicle to intercept the comet was launched on January 12
(see http://deepimpact.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/jpg/orbits2a-color.jpg
). As Deep Impact approached the comet, it released a moduledubbed
the impactorwhich then crashed into Tempel 1.
The module, which had its own auto navigation device, made
three corrections to its trajectory to enable it to hit the target.
Project Manager Rick Grammier commented: We are really threading
the needle with this one. In our quest of a great scientific payoff,
we are attempting something never done before at speeds and distances
that are truly out of this world.
The impactor had a camera to obtain close-up pictures of the
comets surface as it approached collision. The space probe,
500 kilometres away, had 14 minutes to observe the results, using
four data collectors including a camera and infrared spectrometer.
In addition, the collision was observed by three orbital telescopes
using various frequenciesthe Hubble Space Telescope in the
visible light range, Chandra using X-rays and the Spitzer infrared
observatoryas well as 60 earth-based telescopes and thousands
of amateur astronomers. Many people watched the impact on the
NASA homepage, which estimated that 80 million page view requests
worldwide on the morning of the collision.
Immediately before collision, the impactor showed the comets
surface as pitted with flat plains, an irregular ridge and circular
craters. This is the first time that possible impact craters have
been observed on the surface of a comet. The images from the craft
stopped abruptly and the comet erupted into a brilliant explosion.
The comet brightened to six times its original level. NASA
scientist Donald Yeomans explained: Weve had a far
bigger explosion than we anticipated... and there was considerably
more matter coming off than I had thought.
So extensive was the blast that it has not been possible to
determine the exact size of the resulting crater, estimated at
50 to 250 metres and larger than originally expected. How
a washing-machine sized impactor could produce such a large disturbance
is going to take some explanation, Yeomans declared. (Images
at http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/deepimpact/main/)
Scientists are anticipating important findings. Professor Peter
Schultz from Brown University said: The ice inside comets
has been in the deep freeze since the creation of the solar system.
Now we are finally going to see what this stuff looks like and
what it is made of... Comets may have been the messengers that
carried the ingredients of life to Earth.
Previous analysis of Tempel 1s corona, the stream of
gases forming the comets tail, already revealed the presence
of water vapour, carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide and complex organic
compounds.
While data from the collision is yet to be processed, scientists
believe that the impactor may have ploughed into a powdery layer
before hitting more solid rock and ice below. Initial spectral
examination shows the comet contains new unidentified materials,
indicating that its interior composition may differ from the outer
layer. Ground-based telescopes observed a large increase in gases
making up the comets corona, including water vapour.
Project leader Michael F. AHearn from the University
of Maryland speculated that the opacity of the plume the
impactor created and the light it gave off... suggests the dust
excavated from the comets surface was extremely fine, more
like talcum powder than beach sand. And the surface is definitely
not what most people think of when they think of comets... an
ice cube.
Formation of the solar system
The Deep Impact mission brought into play centuries of scientific
endeavour to understand comets and more broadly the origin of
the solar system.
Isaac Newtons masterpiece Philosophiae Naturalis Principia
Mathematica in 1687 identified the laws of motion and gravity
that govern the orbits of the planets and other objects such as
comets. In 1680, Newtons friend Edmond Halley observed a
comet while travelling in Europe and in 1705, by an analysis of
the comets trajectory, successfully predicted its return
in 1758. Halleys Comet is the only visible comet to reappear
within a human lifetime and it has been observed over 22 centuries.
Newtons analysis explained the motion of planets, but
not how the solar system had formed. The German philosopher Immanuel
Kant (1724-1804) was the first to propose a scientific modelknown
as the nebular theoryfor the origins of the planetary system.
In 1755, he suggested that it had formed from a cloud of dispersed
particles drawn together by gravitational attraction to form the
planets and various other objects.
The French mathematician Pierre-Simon Laplace (1749-1827) fleshed
out the theory forty years later by proposing that the outer regions
of the rotating sun developed into concentric rings of matter
that coalesced to form the planets. This model successfully explained
why most planets are contained in one plane and rotate around
the sun in the same direction.
Comets, however, are more unpredictable. Each century new comets
appear without warning and most are never seen again. Some have
extremely long periods before they return. For example, comet
Bennett, first observed in 1970, is not due to return for 17 centuries.
There are also approximately 100 comets with relatively short
periods, between 3 and 200 years. Tempel 1, discovered in 1867
by Ernst Tempel, is one of them.
Most short-term comets are thought to originate in what is
known as the Kuiper belt, a region beyond Neptune containing a
few billion comets. Pluto and its satellite Charon are part of
the belt. Astronomers postulate that disturbances, such as a movement
in a nearby star or even fluctuations in the enormous gas clouds
beyond the solar system, may destabilise a comet in this belt
sending it towards the sun.
A bigger repository of comets, known as the Oort cloud, is
believed to be located even further outas far as one third
of the distance to the nearest star. It is theorised that the
Oort cloud formed at the same time as the giant gas planets, about
4.6 billion years ago, through the aggregation of interstellar
particles. Being so far from the sun, this material would have
been frozen intact.
In the 1970s, two astronomers Victor S. Safronov in the Soviet
Union and A.G.W. Cameron in the US proposed that cometary nuclei
were the building blocks for the formation of the planets. Cameron
postulated that these developed from a giant protostar nebula
that extended 1,000 Astronomical Units (1 AU equals 149,598,000
kilometres) from the sun.
Spectrographic analysis during the twentieth century has consistently
shown that comets are rich in organic compounds. In fact, they
contain so many carbon-based chemicals that they are black in
colour. In 1986, analysis of dust particles from Halleys
Comet by the European Space Agencys Giotto probe and the
Russian Vega probe found it to be one of the richest sources of
organic material in the solar system.
In 1988, the scientist L.J. Allamandola performed a laboratory
experiment that involved warming organic chemicals known to exist
in comets to room temperature in water. He found that insoluble
lipid droplets with membrane forming behaviour were produced.
Such substances may have been the primitive precursors to the
first living organisms.
With the exception of the earth, the inner planets and inner
part of the solar system are very poor in organic material. So
how did life on earth originate? Some scientists believe that
comets may have played a vital part in delivering water and organic
chemicals essential for the formation of life.
Director of the NASA Goddard Center for Astrobiology, Michael
Mumma, explained: The key question is: Were water and organic
molecules delivered to Earth by cometary impact and does (that
process) extend to planets elsewhere? The results from the
Deep Impact mission may provide some of the clues needed to provide
an answer.
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