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comet |
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cometSmall, icy body orbiting the Sun, usually on a highly elliptical path. A comet consists of a central nucleus a few miles across, and has been likened to a dirty snowball because it consists mostly of ice mixed with dust. As the comet approaches the Sun the nucleus heats up, releasing gas and dust which form a tenuous coma, up to 60,000 mi/100,000 km wide, around the nucleus. Gas and dust stream away from the coma to form one or more tails, which may extend for millions of miles. US astronomers concluded in 1996 that there are two distinct types of comet: one rich in methanol and one low in methanol. Evidence for this comes in part from observations of the spectrum of the comet Hyakutake. Comets are believed to have been formed at the birth of the Solar System. Billions of them may reside in a halo (the Oort cloud) beyond Pluto. The gravitational effect of passing stars pushes some towards the Sun, when they eventually become visible from Earth. Most comets swing around the Sun and return to distant space, never to be seen again for thousands or millions of years, although some, called periodic comets, have their orbits altered by the gravitational pull of the planets so that they reappear every 200 years or less. Periodic comets are thought to come from the Kuiper belt, a zone just beyond Neptune. Of the 800 or so comets whose orbits have been calculated, about 160 are periodic. The brightest is Halley's Comet. The one with the shortest known period is Encke's Comet, which orbits the Sun every 3.3 years. A dozen or more comets are discovered every year, some by amateur astronomers.
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In that case, 1992 QB1 may have been ejected from a far more distant -- and still hypothetical -- reservoir of long-period comets called the Weissman notes that Yanaka's orbit, while still somewhat unclear, indicates this object belongs to a group of long-period comets that pass near the sun every 10,000 years or so. This finding is important to understanding the behavior of new comets approaching the sun,' says Stern, "and is in accordance with the lack of observed methane and nitrogen volatiles in long-period comet spectra. |
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