NASA Satellite Sees Solar Hurricane Detach Comet Tail

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Oct. 1, 2007

Dwayne Brown
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-1726
dwayne.c.brown@xxxxxxxx<

Laura Spector/Nancy Neal Jones
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt Md.
301-286-0918/0039
laura.a.spector@xxxxxxxx, nancy.n.jones@xxxxxxxx 

RELEASE: 07-214

NASA SATELLITE SEES SOLAR HURRICANE DETACH COMET TAIL

GREENBELT, Md. - A NASA satellite has captured the first images of a 
collision between a comet and a solar hurricane. It is the first time 
scientists have witnessed such an event on another cosmic body. One 
of NASA's pair of Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory satellites, 
known as STEREO, recorded the event April 20.

The phenomenon was caused by a coronal mass ejection, a large cloud of 
magnetized gas cast into space by the sun. The collision resulted in 
the complete detachment of the plasma tail of Encke's comet. 
Observations of the comet reveal the brightening of its tail as the 
coronal mass ejection swept by and the tail's subsequent separation 
as it was carried away by the front of the ejection. The researchers 
combined the images into a movie.

"We were awestruck when we saw these images," says Angelos Vourlidas, 
lead author and researcher at the Naval Research Laboratory, 
Washington. "This is the first time we've witnessed a collision 
between a coronal mass ejection and a comet and the surprise of 
seeing the disconnection of the tail was the icing on the cake."

Encke's comet was traveling within the orbit of Mercury when a coronal 
mass ejection first crunched the tail then ripped it completely away. 
The comet is only the second repeating, or periodic, comet ever 
identified. Halley's comet was the first.

Scientists at the Naval Research Laboratory made the observations 
using the Heliospheric Imager in its Sun Earth Connection Coronal and 
Heliospheric Investigation telescope suite aboard the STEREO-A 
spacecraft. The results will be published in the Oct. 10 issue of the 
Astrophysical Journal Letters.

Coronal mass ejections are violent eruptions with masses greater than 
a few billion tons. They travel from 60 to more than 2,000 miles per 
second. They have been compared to hurricanes because of the 
widespread disruption they can cause when directed at Earth. These 
solar hurricanes cause geomagnetic storms that can present hazards 
for satellites, radio communications and power systems. However, 
coronal mass ejections are spread over a large volume of space, 
mitigating their mass and power to create an impact softer than a 
baby's breath.

Scientists have been aware of the disconnection of the entire plasma 
tail of a comet for some time, but the conditions that lead to these 
events remained a mystery. It was suspected that coronal mass 
ejections could be responsible for some of the disconnected events, 
but the interaction between a coronal mass ejection and a comet never 
had been observed. 

Preliminary analysis suggests the disconnection likely is triggered by 
what is known as magnetic reconnection, in which the oppositely 
directed magnetic fields around the comet are crunched together by 
the magnetic fields in the coronal mass ejection. The comet fields 
suddenly link together, reconnecting, to release a burst of energy 
that detaches the comet's tail. A similar process takes place in 
Earth's magnetosphere during geomagnetic storms, powering the aurora 
borealis and other phenomena.

Comets are icy leftovers from the solar system's formation billions of 
years ago. They usually reside in the cold, distant regions of the 
solar system. Occasionally, the gravitational tug from a planet, 
another comet or a nearby star sends a comet into the inner solar 
system, where the sun's heat and radiation vaporizes gas and dust 
from the comet to form its tail. Comets typically have two tails: one 
of dust and a fainter one of electrically conducting gas called 
plasma.

"Even though STEREO is primarily designed to study coronal mass 
ejections, particularly their impact on Earth, we hope this impact 
will provide many insights to scientists studying comets," said 
Michael Kaiser, STEREO project scientist at NASA's Goddard Space 
Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.

STEREO is the third mission in NASA's Solar Terrestrial Probes 
program, sponsored by NASA's Science Mission Directorate, Washington. 
Goddard manages the mission, instruments, and science center. The 
Heliospheric Imager was built in the United Kingdom by Rutheford 
Appleton Laboratory and the University of Birmingham with major 
contributions from the Naval Research Laboratory and the Centre 
Spatial de Liege, Belgium. Other international partners in the STEREO 
mission include the European Space Agency and France, Germany, 
Hungary and Switzerland.

For more information and the related images, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/stereo

	
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