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Surprise: The Comet We
Hit Wasn't What We Expected By James Donahue September 2005 NASA’s $240 million
space vehicle that purposefully collided July 4 with Tempel 1, a five-mile long potato-shaped comet, has yielded some surprising
information about these mysterious space travelers. Comets, or at least Tempel
1, is neither ice nor rock, as scientists once theorized. Instead, this one is a large collection of brittle dust, organic
material, ice and gas that appears to be about as fragile as a snowball. The entire package appears
to be faintly held together by the gravity created by its own mass. That such a thing can
hold together for hundreds of thousands of years as it hurls at supersonic speeds on wide sweeping orbits in and out of our
solar system, is but one of the many mysteries surrounding these strange objects that sweep across our night skies, sometimes
once in decades. NASA’s Deep Impact
probe was deliberately crashed into the passing comet on July 4 while cameras from Earth and the Hubble space telescopes recorded
it from many angles. The information gleaned to date suggests a pristine interior of organic material that might date the
solar system’s formation to as long as 4.5 billion years, a report in the journal Science says. Michael A’Hearn,
an astronomer at The comet itself is filled
with craters from being hit by other celestial objects during its adventures through space and time. A’Hearn believes
the comet’s porous outer surface is so something like a snowy dirt ball that reacts to the heat of sunlight when passing
through out solar system. It thus ejects millions of tiny fragments that reflect sunlight in passing, creating what appears
as a long tail to observers on Earth. Karen Meech, from the
That is if all comets
are made of the same stuff. German astronomer at
Max Planck Institute said Tempel 1 might be compared to an ancient block of Swiss cheese. “The whole thing is brittle
and crumbles and has lots of holes. The surface is dark because light gets trapped everywhere,” he said. In case you wonder, the
probe, which was about the size of a coffee table, left a hole the size of a football field and about 30 feet deep. |
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