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On July 23, 1995,
an unusually large and bright comet was seen outside of Jupiter's orbit
by Alan Hale of New Mexico and Thomas Bopp of Arizona. Careful analysis
of Hubble Space Telescope images suggested that its intense brightness
was due to its exceptionally large size. While the nuclei of most comets
are about 1.6 to 3.2 km (1 to 2 miles) across, Hale-Bopp's was estimated
to be 40 km (25 miles) across. It was visible even through bright city
skies, and may have been the most viewed comet in recorded history.
Comet Hale-Bopp holds the record for the longest period of naked-eye
visibility: an astonishing 19 months. It will not appear again for another
2,400 years.
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COMET
HALE-BOPP

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COMET
SWIFT-TUTTLE 1992

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This comet was first
seen in July 1862 by American astronomers Lewis Swift and Horace Tuttle.
As Comet Swift-Tuttle moves closer to the Sun every 120 years, it leaves
behind a trail of dust debris that provides the ingredients for a spectacular
fireworks display seen in July and August. As Earth passes through the
remnants of this dust tail, we can see on a clear night the Perseid meteor
shower. Comet Swift-Tuttle is noted as the comet some scientists predicted
could one day collide with Earth because the two orbits closely intercept
each other. The latest calculations show that it will pass a comfortable
24 million km (15 million miles) from Earth on its next trip to the inner
Solar System.
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COMET
HYAKUTAKE

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On January 30,
1996, Yuji Hyakutake (pronounced "hyah-koo-tah-kay"), an amateur astronomer
from southern Japan, discovered a new comet using a pair of binoculars.
In the spring of that year this small bright comet with a nucleus of
1.6 to 3.2 km (1 to 2 miles) made a close flyby of Earth sporting
one of the longest tails ever observed. The Hubble Space Telescope studied
the nucleus of this comet in great detail. This is not Comet Hyakutake's
first visit to the inner Solar System. Astronomers have calculated its
orbit and believe it was here about 8,000 years ago. Its orbit will
not bring it near the Sun again for about 14,000 years.
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COMET
HALLEY

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Comet Halley is perhaps
the most famous comet in history. It was named after British astronomer
Edmund Halley, who calculated its orbit. He determined that the comets
seen in 1531 and 1607 were the same objects that followed a 76-year orbit.
Unfortunately, Halley died in 1742, never living to see his prediction
come true when the comet returned on Christmas Eve in 1758. Each time
this comet's orbit approaches the Sun, its 15-km (9-mile) nucleus sheds
about 6 m (7 yards) of ice and rock into space. This debris forms an orbiting
trail that, when falling to Earth, is called the Orionids meteor shower.
Comet Halley will return to the inner Solar System in the year 2061.
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COMET
SHOEMAKER-LEVY 9

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Between July 16 and
July 22, 1994, more than 20 fragments of Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 collided
with the planet Jupiter. Astronomers Carolyn and Eugene Shoemaker and
David Levy discovered the comet in 1993. The Hubble Space Telescope took
many spectacular pictures of this event as the comet's pieces crashed
into Jupiter's southern hemisphere. It was the first collision of two
Solar System bodies ever to be recorded. The impacts created atmospheric
plumes many thousands of kilometers high that showed hot "bubbles" of
gas with large dark "scars" covering the planet's sky.
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