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Coordinated observations of the collision of NASA's Deep Impact mission with comet 9P/Tempel 1 by the Subaru, Gemini and Keck telescopes on Mauna Kea delivered surprising new insights into the ancestry and life-cycles of comets. Specifically, materials beneath the comet’s dusty skin shows striking similarities between two families of comets where no relationship had been suspected.
When NASA's Deep Impact mission ploughed into comet 9P/Tempel
1 on July 4th of this year, the giant telescopes on Mauna
Kea had a unique view of the massive cloud of dust, gas
and ice expelled during the collision.
A series of coordinated observations, made under ideal
conditions by the world's largest collection of big telescopes,
delivered surprising new insights into the ancestry and
life cycles of comets. Specifically, materials beneath the
comet's dusty skin reveal striking similarities between
two families of comets where no relationship had been suspected.
The observations also allowed scientists to determine the
mass of material blasted out by the collision, which is
estimated to be as much as 25 fully-loaded tractor trailer-trucks.
The findings are based on the composition of rocky dust
detected by both the Subaru and Gemini 8-meter telescopes
and ethane, water and carbon-based organic compounds revealed
by the 10-meter W.M. Keck Observatory. The results from
these Mauna Kea observations were made available today in
a special segment in the journal Science highlighting results
from the Deep Impact experiment.
Comet Tempel 1 was selected for the Deep Impact experiment
because it orbits the Sun in a stable orbit that allows
its surface to be gently baked with solar radiation. As
a result, the comet has an old weathered,protective layer
of dust that covers the icy material beneath, much like
a snowbank builds up dirt on its surface as it melts in
the springtime sunlight. The Deep Impact mission was designed
to dig deep beneath this crusty exterior to learn more about
the true nature of the comet's dust and ice components.
"This comet definitely had something to hide under
its veneer of rock and ice and we were ready with the world's
biggest telescopes to find out what it was," said Chick
Woodward of the University of Minneapolis and part of the
Gemini observing team.
The combined observations show a complex mix of silicates,
water and organic compounds beneath the surface of the comet.
These materials are similar to what is seen in another class
of comets thought to reside in a distant swarm of pristine
bodies called the Oort Cloud. Oort Cloud comets are well
preserved fossils in the frozen suburbs of the solar system
that have changed little over the billions of years since
their formation. When they are occasionally nudged gravitationally
toward the Sun they warm up and release a profuse amount
of gas and dust on a one-time visit to the inner solar system..
Returning comets like Tempel 1 (known as periodic comets)
were believed to have formed in a colder nursery distinctly
different from the birthplaces of their cousins, the Oort
Cloud comets. The evidence for two distinct "family
trees" lies in their vastly different orbits and apparent
composition. "Now we see that the difference may really
be just superficial: only skin deep." said Woodward.
"Under the surface, these comets may not be so different
after all.
This similarity indicates that both types of comets might
have shared a birthplace in a region of the forming solar
system where temperatures were warm enough to produce the
materials observed. "It is now likely that these bodies
formed between the orbits of Jupiter and Neptune in a common
nursery," said Seiji Sugita of the University of Tokyo
and Subaru team member.
"Another question that the Mauna Kea telescopes were
able to address is the amount of mass ejected when the comet
was impacted by the chunk of copper about the size of a
grand piano from the Deep Impact spacecraft," Sugita
commented. At the time of impact the spacecraft was traveling
at about 23,000 miles per hour or nearly 37,000 kilometers
per hour.
Because the spacecraft was unable to study the size of
the crater created after it was formed, the high-resolution
Mauna Kea observations provided the necessary data to get
a firm estimate of the mass ejection, which was about 1000
tons. "To release this amount of material, the comet
must have a fairly soft consistency," Sugita said.
"The splash from NASA's impact probe freed these materials
and we were in the right place to capture them with the
biggest telescopes on Earth," said W.M. Keck Director
Fred Chaffee. "The close collaboration among Keck,
Gemini and Subaru assured that the very best science was
done by the best telescopes in the world, demonstrating
that the whole is often greater than the sum of its parts."
All three of Mauna Kea's largest telescopes observed the
comet in the infrared part of the spectrum which is light
that can be described as "redder than red." The
Deep Impact spacecraft was not designed to observe the comet
in the mid-infrared (or thermal infrared) part of the spectrum,
which is what Subaru and Gemini were able to do. The Keck
observations used a near-infrared, high-resolution spectrograph.
Large instruments of this sort would have been impossible
to fit on the Deep Impact spacecraft.
"These observations give us the best glimpse yet at
what's under the dusty skin of a comet," said David
Harker who led the Gemini team. "Within an hour of
impact, the comet's glow was transformed and we were able
to detect a whole host of fine dusty silicates propelled
by a sustained gas geyser from under the comet's protective
crust. These included a large amount of olivine, similar
in composition to what you would find at the beaches below
Mauna Kea. This incredible data was really a gift from Mauna
Kea!"
Instruments that made these observations were:
* MICHELLE (Mid-Infrared Echelle Spectrograph/Imager)
on the 8-meter Fredrick C. Gillett (Gemini North) Telescope
* NIRSPEC (Near-Infrared Spectrograph) on the 10-meter on
the Keck II 10-meter telescope
* COMICS (COoled Mid-Infrared Camera and Spectrograph) on
the 8-meter Subaru telescope
Figure
1. Mid-infrared
images of comet 9P/Tempel 1 after the Deep Impact collision.
Red shows carbon-rich dust from the comet surface, and
green shows silicate-rich fresh dust from underneath
the comet surface. The fresh comet material is dispersed
into space over several hours of time.(Larger Image) |
September 15, 2005 |