Discover – September 2019

(Greg DeLong) #1

20


THINGS


YOU


DIDN’T


KNOW


ABOUT...


2011 and visible in March 2013. Astronomers estimate


its orbit at more than 100,000 years, so if you missed


it, well, sorry. 12  Sometimes comets go missing: They


may get bumped out of orbit, crash into another


object or simply run out of particles to shed, and ice


to boil off, after a last swing around the sun. 13  Comet


85D/Boethin likely suffered such a fate. Discovered in


1975 and spotted again in 1986, it was expected back in


1997 and 2008. It was a no-show both years, however.


In 2017, astronomers gave it a D for “disappeared.”


14  Then there’s the X factor: Comets for which a reli-


able orbit has not been calculated get an X prefix. This


category consists mostly of historical flybys, likely


from the distant Oort Cloud, that have yet to make a


return visit. 15  According to NASA, more than 3,500


comets have been identified so far, but that’s small


potatoes compared with the billions, possibly trillions


that astronomers believe may be out there. 16  While


researchers have a solid understanding of what com-


ets are, they can still surprise us. In April, for the first


time, astronomers reported in Nature Astronomy that


they’d found comet particles embedded in a meteorite


found in Antarctica. 17  Our solar system is not alone


when it comes to dirty snowballs whizzing around.


Astronomers have found several exocomets — the


most recent in March — circling Beta Pictoris, a young


star that’s 63 light-years from our own. 18  Back on


Earth, a technique called the comet assay, created in


the 1980s, has been an invaluable tool for analyzing


DNA and identifying damaged segments. 19  Formally


known as single-cell gel electrophoresis, the comet


assay suspends cells in gel and, using an electric field,


knocks apart their molecules — kind of like a cue ball


hitting racked balls on a pool table. 20  The traveling


molecules and other fragments separate by size and


charge. Intact DNA tends to stay put, more or less, but


the broken bits of damaged double helix travel further


through the gel, creating a pattern that resembles the


tail of a comet. And that’s no tall tale.


D


Gemma Tarlach is senior editor at Discover.


1  Gotta love those long-hairs. We’re talking comets, of


course. The word derives from kometes, ancient Greek


for “a head with long hair.” 2  While the Greeks began


using the term about 2,500 years ago, astronomers


in both China and Mesopotamia logged appearances


of the long-tailed objects at least 500 years earlier.


3  We don’t know when humans first observed comets,


but in 2018, two researchers claimed that some of


France’s famous Lascaux cave art — created about


17,000 years ago — depicted cometary activity. 4  It


wasn’t until the 17th century that early astronomers


determined comets were celestial objects with


extremely elongated elliptical orbits around our sun.


5  Building on the “dirty snowball” model developed in


the middle of the 20th century, we now know a comet’s


nucleus of ice, rock and other components (such as


dust and frozen gas), ranges from less than a mile to


a few dozen miles in diameter. 6  For most of its cold,


lonely journey, a comet is a tail-less, very dark object,


coated in a layer of dust and other particles. The grime


reduces its albedo, or reflectivity, to the equivalent


of charcoal. 7  As a comet nears the sun and heats


up, its ice begins to melt and bits of released grime


form a coma: a dusty cloud around the nucleus. Solar


winds and other emissions create at least two sepa-


rate tails of dust and gas — the “long hairs” that give


comets their name. 8  Astronomers believe all comets


originate in one of two icy expanses of debris left over


from the formation of our solar system. One of them,


the Kuiper Belt, is a doughnut-shaped


cloud of these scraps that


starts beyond Neptune,


about 3 billion miles from


the sun. 9  Periodic com-


ets, which have orbits of


less than 200 years — such


as the famous 1P/Halley —


typically come from the Kuiper Belt. 10  The


more distant cometary homeland, the Oort Cloud,


is about 18 trillion miles from the sun. Non-periodic


comets originate way out there. Those comets,


denoted with a C, have orbits lasting 200 years or


more — sometimes a lot more. 11  Take C 2011/L4, bet-


ter known as Comet PANSTARRS. Named for the


instrument that detected it, it was discovered only in


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DISCOVERMAGAZINE.COM

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BY GEMMA TARLACH


Comet 67P/


Churyumov–


Gerasimenko (above)


originated in the


Kuiper Belt, one


of two cometary


homelands in our


solar system (below).


Comets with orbits of


more than 200 years


hail from the more


distant Oort Cloud.


Both debris fields


are left over from the


system’s formation.


A comet spends most


of its time as a dark lump.


Its bright coma and tails appear


only as the nucleus nears the sun.


1P/Halley
Saturn

Sun


Jupiter


Uranus


Neptune


OORT CLOUD


Nucleus


To sun


Coma


D
us
t tail

G


a


s


t
a

il


K
U
IP
ER
BE
LT

Pluto

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