about us   subscribe   site map   
 

Image Archive
• Hall of Fame
• Wallpapers
• Zoomable
• View All
• Top 100
• Top 100 zip file screen size (27Mb)
• Top 100 zip file original size (1.4Gb)
• Advanced Search
• Image formats

Spectacular view of ongoing comet breakup

Click for larger image

Hubble Space Telescope is providing astronomers with extraordinary views of Comet 73P/Schwassmann-Wachmann 3. The fragile comet is rapidly disintegrating as it approaches the Sun. Hubble images have uncovered many more fragments than have been reported by ground-based observers. These observations provide an unprecedented opportunity to study the demise of a comet nucleus. The comet is currently a chain of over 33 separate fragments, named alphabetically, stretching across the sky by several times the angular diameter of the Moon. Hubble caught fragment B during three days shortly after large outbursts in activity (from top to bottom: 18 April, 19 April and 20 April). Hubble shows several dozen "mini-comets? trailing behind each main fragment, probably associated with the ejection of house-sized chunks of surface material. Deep-freeze relics of the early Solar System, cometary nuclei are porous and fragile mixes of dust and ices that can break apart due to the thermal, gravitational, and dynamical stresses of approaching the Sun. Whether any of the many fragments survive the trip around the Sun remains to be seen in the weeks ahead.

Credit: NASA, ESA, H. Weaver (APL/JHU), M. Mutchler and Z. Levay (STScI)

 

Info

Related News
Related Videos
Id:heic0605a
Object:Comet 73P/Schwassmann-Wachmann 3, Fragment B
Type:Solar System
Instru-ment:ACS
Width:2760
Height:1275

Downloads

Images
Fullsize Original
1,590 KB
Large JPEG
351 KB
Screensize JPEG
172 KB
 
Zoomable
Zoomable

 
Wallpapers
1024 x 768
87 KB
1280 x 1024
136 KB
1600 x 1200
183 KB