Scientists to blast hole in a
comet
Posted Dec. 14,
2004
Special to World Science
Scientists are planning to shoot a copper
projectile to blast a hole in a comet for the first time, in an effort to
study the interior of the enigmatic objects.
The 317-pound (144-kg) projectile will
charge towards comet Tempel 1 at 23,000 miles (37,000 km) per hour, taking
photographs of the comet before being wiped out by its surrounding dust cloud,
researchers said. The blast could leave a hole as big as a house or a stadium in
the comet, they added.
Comets are basically giant,
dirty snowballs that circulate throughout our Solar System. They are believed to
contain material left over from the formation of the Solar System, 4 ½ billion
years ago.
The reason for blasting a hole
into the comet is that only the interior is believed to contain original,
undisturbed material, scientists said. This is because every time a comet passes
close to the Sun, its outer layers heat up and change chemically.
The project could reveal new
facts about the interior of comets, including their chemical composition. This
might shed light on some questions that have long intrigued scientists. One such
question is whether some of the chemicals needed for the origin of life might
have come from comets, as some theorists believe.
Scientists associated with the
NASA mission described the project at a briefing in Washignton, D.C. on Dec. 14.
The researchers included NASA’s Tom Morgan; Rick Grammier of NASA’s Jet
Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.; Mike A’Hearn of the University of
Maryland; and Karen Meech of the Institute for Astronomy, (Hilo), Hawaii.
The camera aboard the
projectile will be able to take pictures with a level of detail unprecedented
for comet images. It possibly could be able to distinguish features on the comet
as small as a melon, according to scientists, though this depends on how close
the camera gets before being destroyed.
In addition, other cameras on
board the “flyby” spacecraft that shoots out the impact projectile will take
pictures, as well as cameras on other telescopes on Earth and in space,
scientists said. People between Arizona and New Zealand, including amateur
observers, will be in a position to view the impact on or around July 4, 2005,
the researchers said. People outside that area will still be able to view the
aftermath of the initial impact, which could last for hours or days, Meech said.
The cost of the project, dubbed
Deep Impact, is about $330 million, scientists said. This pays, among other
things, for a “smart” impact projectile that will be able to maneuver itself
into the comet while taking pictures, and which contains its own propulsion
devices.
Different scientists have
different ideas about what will happen the copper impact projectile hits the
comet. What exactly happens then will reveal facts about the comet’s interior,
said A’Hearn.
Most likely, a “cone” of
ejected material will come flying out of the nucleus of the comet – the most
solid part of the object, which is at its head, he said. Three main components
make up a comet: the coma, a fuzzy looking cloud of gas and dust surrounding a
nucleus that is a mixture of ice and rocks, and a tail that also consists of gas
and dust.
“Just by looking at shape of
cone, we can learn about strength of the cometary nucleus,” he said. Some
researchers believe entire cone may lift off the nucleus, which would be an
indication that the nucleus is very strong, he added. “Others think we will
fracture the nucleus into several pieces,” he added. And “others think we
will just compress material downward,” without any particular signs of an
explosion.
The projectile will be far too
small to significantly change the comet’s trajectory, the researchers said.
The researchers said that by
January 12, a rocket containing the flyby “Deep Impact” spacecraft, with the
projectile inside it, will lift off. Deep Impact will release its projectile
when it and the comet are about 83 million miles (134 million km) from Earth,
which is slightly less than the distance between the Sun and the Earth.
Comet
Tempel 1, discovered in 1867 by Ernst Tempel has made many passages through the
inner solar system, orbiting the Sun every 5.5 years. This makes Tempel 1 a good
target to study evolutionary change in the mantle, or upper crust, according to
researchers.
Astronomers believe Tempel 1
comes from the Kuiper belt, a disc-shaped region of comets and asteroids that
lies beyond Neptune’s orbit and extends out for several hundred times the
distance between the Earth and the Sun.