Year of the Comet
Comet C/2011 L4 (PANSTARRS)

PANSTARRS information

Comet C/2012 S1 (ISON)

ISON information

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Deep Impact spacecraft eyes Comet ISON

The Comet ISON imaging campaign is expected to yield infrared data and light curves, which are used in defining the comet’s rotation rate, in addition to visible-light images.
By Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California, NASA Headquarters, Washington, D.C. Published: February 7, 2013
Comet-ISON
This image of Comet ISON (C/2012 S1) was taken by the Medium-Resolution Imager of NASA's Deep Impact spacecraft.
NASA’s Deep Impact spacecraft has acquired its first images of Comet ISON (C/2012 S1). The spacecraft’s Medium-Resolution Imager took the images over a 36-hour period January 17–18, 2013, from a distance of 493 million miles (793 million kilometers). Many scientists anticipate a bright future for Comet ISON; the spaceborne conglomeration of dust and ice may put on quite a show as it passes through the inner solar system this fall.

“This is the fourth comet on which we have performed science observations and the farthest point from Earth from which we’ve tried to transmit data on a comet,” said Tim Larson of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California. “The distance limits our bandwidth, so it’s a little like communicating through a modem after being used to DSL. But we’re going to coordinate our science collection and playback so we maximize our return on this potentially spectacular comet.”

Deep Impact has executed close flybys of two comets — Tempel 1 and Hartley 2 — and performed scientific observations on two more — Comet Garradd and now ISON. The Comet ISON imaging campaign is expected to yield infrared data and light curves, which are used in defining the comet’s rotation rate, in addition to visible-light images. A movie of Comet ISON was generated from initial data acquired during this campaign. Preliminary results indicate that, although the comet is still in the outer solar system, more than 474 million miles (763 million km) from the Sun, it is already active. As of January 18, the tail extending from ISON’s nucleus was already more than 40,000 miles (64,400km) long.

Long-period comets like ISON are thought to arrive from the solar system’s Oort Cloud, a giant spherical cloud of icy bodies surrounding our solar system so far away that its outer edge is about a third of the way to the nearest star other than our Sun. Every once in a while, one of these loose conglomerations of ice, rock, dust, and organic compounds is disturbed out of its established orbit in the Oort Cloud by a passing star or the combined gravitational effects of the stars in the Milky Way Galaxy. With these gravitational nudges, so begins a comet’s eons-long, arching plunge toward the inner solar system.

Two Russian astronomers using the International Scientific Optical Network’s 16-inch (40 centimeters) telescope near Kislovodsk discovered Comet ISON on September 21, 2012. NASA’s Near-Earth Object Program Office, based at JPL, has plotted its orbit and determined that the comet is more than likely making its first-ever sweep through the inner solar system. Having not come this way before means the comet’s pristine surface has a higher probability of being laden with volatile material just waiting for some of the Sun’s energy to heat it up and help it escape. With the exodus of these clean ices could come a boatload of dust, held in check since the beginnings of our solar system. This released gas and dust is what is seen on Earth as comprising a comet’s atmosphere — coma — and tail.

Comet ISON will not be a threat to Earth, getting no closer to Earth than about 40 million miles (64 million km) December 26, 2013. But stargazers will have an opportunity to view the comet’s head and tail before and after its closest approach to the Sun if the comet doesn’t fade early or break up before reaching our star.

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GREGG BROWER from FLORIDA said:
The gloom and doomers are hilarious! Please keep writing! You would think that sense they post to a magazine such as this, they would have a little more knowledge of physics and the universe in general.
4 stars
RICHARD MCCONNELL from UNITED KINGDOM said:
The disaster mongers are at it already! It's not likely that ISON will come within 100 million miles of Earth. It's more likely to be a big disappointment like Kohoutek years ago. If it beats Hale-Bopp it will be very good!
PRICHAR HARNHATHYA from THAILAND said:
This is very exciting. Please keep us updated on this comet of a life time.
5 stars
LARS LINDSTROM from SWEDEN said:
I´m eagerly awaiting this comet that will possibly be THE comet of the century. 20X80 binoculars and my new homemade 10" reflector awaits the event. I will take my instruments downtown to the lake Mälaren shore to let the passers-by have a look, just like the San Francisco Sidewalk Astronomers do. Cleaar skies, everyone!

5 stars
BILL SIMPSON from LOUISIANA said:
Very cool video. You can tell it is out-gassing already. I hope Steve is wrong because if it hits Greenland and melts all that ice up there, I'll have to move somewhere more than my 20 feet above existing sea level in Slidell. It nails the Gulf of Mexico, and the tsunami might be a bit of a problem here too. As would the oil spills, a LOT of oil spills. At least we have the Impact Earth web site to see how big the blast will be before it hits. If the site mysteriously goes down, start worrying.
Hitting the Moon would be something to see. I don't think Hollywood has done that one yet. Order your dark goggles early. The Space Station crew would have to watch out for a lot of rocks. I wonder how many million years they would orbit up there. Sell your satellite TV company stock for sure. Astronomy wouldn't have to worry about informing the readers about meteor showers. There would always be a meteor shower. Would they form a ring up there? Auto body shops and roofing businesses would boom as the rocks constantly fell. The price of hamburgers might go WAY up, depending on the size of the rocks falling from the sky. Indoor stadiums would be in high demand. We might be able to shut off the street lights for a while.
I getting ready for the possible comet hit by listening to the New Orleans police over the Internet on Radio Reference. (The cops wanted to encrypt it, but the people demanded the early crime warning, and the free entertainment during any large gathering where alcohol is consumed. And there were rumors of trying to conceal the invasion of the UN troops in the black helicopters.) Since I started typing this, a woman cut her hand by punching out a window of a business on Bourbon street (EMS is on the way) and another drunk driver hit a utility pole and broke it in two. (Entergy is en-route. Hopefully, they will do a better job than when they adjusted the relay serving the Superdome right before the Super Bowl game. Then again, numbers are confusing to the some of the locals around these parts. They all look alike on those control panels and laptop screens that limit the amount of current in the wires to the stadium. And only half of the lights went out. What do people expect, perfection?) We get our money's worth out of our civil servants during Mardi Gras. The comet hit can't be much worse.
5 stars
SUELI IRWIN from BRAZIL said:
I CANT WAIT TO SEE THAT WONDERFULL COMET ISON, HERE FRON QUATRO BARRAS PR. BRAZIL.I WILL BE CONNECT VERY CLOSE WITH NASA AND ASTRONOMY MAGAZINE TO HAVE REAL INFORMATION,THANK YOU GUYS.
5 stars
CIRCULATOR THIRTY-EIGHT said:
Comet C/2012 S1 ISON Facebook Page - http://facebook.com/C2012S1
5 stars
STEVEN HRISAK from FLORIDA said:
The Bible Codes predicted this comet a long time ago. I actually based my first gloom and doom website on the fact that a comet would hit the earth in 2012. Later I realized that comets are named in the year they are found. This comets realname is Comet 2012 S1. What's going to happen to ISON's course when it starts to melt for the heat of our sun?? Gases such as CO2 will be released and act as a jet pack and change the comets course. Will hit the sun? Will hit the moon? Will hit earth? http://comet2012.com/comet-ison/
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