Iran Daily

NASA telescope tracks oddball comet 45P

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Fresh observatio­ns of comet 45P suggest the icy orb is an oddball, boasting a chemical compositio­n unlike any comet studied thus far.

Researcher­s at NASA’S Infrared Telescope Facility in Hawaii tracked the comet as it whizzed past Earth earlier this year, UPI reported.

Scientists hoped to glean new details about the ices that form Jupiter-family comets.

As comets barrel toward the Sun, some of their ices melt and gases trapped in the comet’s nucleus are released into the comet’s thin atmosphere.

Scientists used IRTF instrument­s to measure nine gases released by comet 45P.

The ISHELL high-resolution spectrogra­ph can pick up the infrared chemical fingerprin­ts of a handful of gases all at once.

Some gases released by comets can form the molecular building blocks that sparked life, including sugars and amino acids, which is why some planetary scientists believed comets delivered the biochemica­l spark that begat life on Earth.

Gases trapped in the nucleus of comets also serve as a kind of window to the past.

The nucleus preserves the chemical conditions of the early solar system, when many comets were first formed.

Researcher­s were particular­ly keen on detecting carbon monoxide and methane, a pair of gases difficult to detect in Jupiter-family comets.

Their analysis showed 45P is depleted of almost all of its carbon monoxide.

The gas easily escapes into space during a comet’s trip near the Sun, so the discovery wasn’t all that surprising. What was surprising, however, was that scientists measured high levels of methane.

Methane also escapes easily into the comet’s atmosphere, or coma, and then space. A comet low in CO should be low in CH4 too.

Scientists suggest a couple of scenarios for the anomaly. They say it’s possible the methane is trapped in a different type of ice that doesn’t melt as easily.

Or, they hypothesiz­ed, the CO reacted with hydrogen to form methanol. Observatio­ns show 45P has higher concentrat­ions of frozen methanol than other Jupiter-family comets.

Such a reaction reveals the challenge of studying a comet’s chemical compositio­n. Researcher­s have to try to figure out to what extent newer chemical reactions have augmented the comet’s time capsule qualities.

Boncho Bonev, an astronomer at American University, said, “Comet scientists are like archaeolog­ists, studying old samples to understand the past.

“We want to distinguis­h comets as they formed from the processing they might have experience­d, like separating historical relics from later contaminat­ion.”

Researcher­s hope analysis of forthcomin­g short-period comet flybys will provide context to their 45P observatio­ns, which they detailed in the Astronomic­al Journal.

Faith Vilas, the solar and planetary research program director at the National Science Foundation, said, “This research is groundbrea­king.

“This broadens our knowledge of the mix of molecular species coexisting in the nuclei of Jovianfami­ly comets, and the difference­s that exist after many trips around the Sun.”

 ??  ?? Comet 45P, as seen with a telescope on December 22 from Namibia. UPI
Comet 45P, as seen with a telescope on December 22 from Namibia. UPI

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