 |
... Q&A: Comets (cont'd) ...
| 11.
When did the comet break up, and how long did it take it to collide
with Jupiter? |
When Shoemaker-Levy 9 apparently broke up on July
7, 1992, its distance from the center of Jupiter was about 91,000
km, or about 1.3 Jupiter radii. The fragments collided with Jupiter
over a seven-day period starting with fragment "A" on July
16, 1994 and ending with fragment "W" on July 22. The period
between the breakup and the collision was a little more than two years.
During that time, the fragments of Shoemaker-Levy 9 moved farther
and farther away from each other. |
| 12. If Shoemaker-Levy
9 wasn't discovered until 1993, how do we know it broke up in 1992? |
Based on the path the comet followed after discovery,
the day when the elliptical orbit of the comet brought it closest to Jupiter
was calculated to be July 7, 1992. Tidal forces were strongest when the
comet was closest to Jupiter, which is when scientists believe the comet
broke up. |
| 13. Why
did Shoemaker-Levy 9 crash into Jupiter? |
Comets usually orbit the Sun, but Shoemaker-Levy 9 was
captured by Jupiter's gravity and appears to have orbited the planet for
about two decades before the breakup. After Shoemaker-Levy 9 broke into
fragments, it was in an orbit around Jupiter that had a period of two
years. The energy lost in the breakup of the comet lowered the point of
closest approach ("perijove") of the subsequent orbit to within
one Jupiter radius of that planet's center. |
| 14. How
often does a comet/asteroid collide with Earth? |
According to David Levy, a half-mile-wide object should
hit the Earth on the average of once every 100,000 years. However, small
objects the size of a grain of sand or a piece of gravel hit the Earth
each minute. The frequency with which a 100-meter asteroid/comet hits
Earth is about once every 100 years. The chances could be higher or lower
because these small objects are not easy to see with our telescopes, so
their number is not well known. |
| 15. How
are solar system objects affected by gravity-induced impacts? |
|
The craters on the moon were caused by impacts with other objects.
Craters on Earth are evidence that large objects have hit it. Many scientists
believe that an asteroid or a comet was responsible for the extinction
of the dinosaurs. The current theory of the formation of Earth's moon
is linked to a collision or close encounter with a very large body.
The oceans are believed to have formed from the impacts of many water-rich
planetesimals and cometesimals.
A small asteroid fragment entered the sparsely-populated region of
Tunguska, Siberia on June 30, 1908, causing destruction of many trees
and reindeer. Craters on most solar system bodies provide evidence of
collisions with asteroids or comets. If the impacted body is small,
it can be forced into a different orbit and find itself captured by
a nearby larger body. Some astronomers believe that the moons of Mars
are really asteroids that ventured too close to the planet and were
trapped by its gravity.
|
| 16. How
fast was Shoemaker-Levy 9 traveling and how much energy did it have when
it hit Jupiter? |
The fragments of Shoemaker-Levy 9 were traveling at
an impact speed of 60 km/sec when they struck Jupiter with a kinetic energy
equivalent to 600 times the world's estimated nuclear arsenal. |
| 17. What
did the impact sites tell us about Shoemaker-Levy 9? |
Scientists are still not certain whether the Shoemaker-Levy
9 was a comet or an asteroid. At present, many scientists favor a cometary
origin. But we may never know the answer because comets and asteroids
have so much in common. Comets and asteroids are both small bodies. Both
are primordial, having formed 4.5 billion years ago. And they can be found
near Jupiter. Comets generally contain a large amount of water; asteroids
do not. Some analyses tend to favor that Shoemaker-Levy 9 was a comet.
One such analysis shows the nuclei had comas before the impacts. However,
some data still leave doubt as to the origin of Shoemaker-Levy 9. One
finding, for example, reveals an absence of a strong indication of water
in the impact debris. |
| 18. What
did the impact sites tell us about Jupiter? |
The impacts into the Jovian atmosphere have provided
scientists with a natural tracer of Jovian winds. The high-speed easterly
and westerly jets turned the dark spots into "curly-cue" features.
Hubble's ultraviolet observations showed the debris particles sinking
into Jupiter's atmosphere. The observation provided a three-dimensional
perspective of Jupiter's wind patterns. At lower altitudes the impact
debris flowed east and west; in the higher stratosphere they moved primarily
from the poles toward the equator because auroral heating drove them in
that direction. Auroral heating is caused by the interaction of ions with
Jupiter's strong magnetosphere, producing heat and light. |
| 19. What
lasting effects did Shoemaker-Levy 9 make on Jupiter? |
The individual impact sites are fading, leaving behind
a thin band of debris in the Jovian atmosphere. The material left from
Shoemaker-Levy 9 will continue to sink into the depths of Jupiter's atmosphere,
leaving no permanent change in Jupiter's appearance.
|
|
 |