Comets JV cap perfect season with win over Tunstall – YourGV.com

For the first time in a good number of years, Halifax County High School has an undefeated junior varsity football team.

That accomplishment rests with the Comets in the wake of the teams 44-0 win over Tunstall High School Thursday night at Tunstall High School in Dry Fork.

Thursday nights win gave the Comets a perfect 10-0 slate for the season.

It was a great night overall, Comets head coach Thomas Turbeville said of Thursday nights win.

It was a great ending to a storybook season. The kids played hard all year long. They left it all out on the field and proved we have some talent here in Halifax County.

While the Comets ran the tables on the season, the season wasnt without its anxious moments.

We went through a little adversity, Turbeville noted.

We lost a couple of kids during the season that we had penciled in as starters, and the kids behind them stepped right in and filled in where the others left off, and we didnt lose a beat.

I am extremely proud of our 10th-graders, Turbeville added.

They stepped up and played as if they were veteran players. They led the show and helped our ninth-graders learn what it is to play over here. I think that will bode well for us moving forward.

The Comets dominated Thursdays game against Tunstall High School, scoring in all phases of the contest. Offensively, Savion Howard scored on a 70-yard run and later scored a 2-point conversion. Howard also returned a kick 87 yards for a touchdown to give the Comets special teams unit a score.

In addition, the Comets got touchdowns on a 24-yard run by Qualik Tucker and a 15-yard run from Demitrius Robertson. The Comets also got successful 2-point conversions from Tucker, Kameron Roberts and Semaj Jeffreys.

The Comets also had a stellar defensive effort that netted two touchdowns.

Two interceptions from AZiyah Easley intercepted two passes during the contest, returning one 70 yards for a touchdown. Jonathan Hammock recovered two fumbles, one of which resulted from a botched Tunstall High School punt, that Hammock recovered in the end zone for a touchdown.

We went into this game with the plan that we were going to score four times on defense, and we got two, Turbeville said.

We got half of what we were looking for. We challenged the kids to not only stop the other team, but to try to get the ball away and do something with it.

Our defense played tremendously, Turbeville added, and set us up with good opportunities to have short fields on some plays and get us the ball back quickly, so we had opportunities on offense.

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Comets JV cap perfect season with win over Tunstall - YourGV.com

Binghamton Devils Lose a Tough One to Utica Comets in OT – All About The Jersey

Binghamton, NY - This one stings.

The BDevils controlled play for much of three periods over the Utica Comets on Saturday but found a way to lose in OT by a score of 3-2 without a bit of controversy at the end.

Zack MacEwen scored the game-winner after Aston Sautner got tied up with goaltender Louis Domingue in a battle with Dakota Mermis in the crease, but the referee called it a good goal after a lengthy discussion by the four officials near the penalty box.

Here is an overhead shot I obtained with the play in question with the puck in the net;

But the main topic was another two-goal lead that disappeared for the Devils and led to the eventual outcome with the Comets scoring three unanswered in their comeback.

Binghamton (5-7-3) would jump to an early 1-0 lead when Joe Morrow (1) pounced on a rebound given up by Utica goalie Michael DiPietro off the stick of Ben Street. The momentum carried on and a 1:38 later Street (6) scored for a power-play tally by some smooth tic-tac-toe passing involving Joey Anderson and Brett Seney.

No scoring took place in the middle frame as both teams had their opportunities as it became a battle between the two players in-between the pipes.

However, the third period had a different story-line as Utica (9-4-0) began their comeback by goals from Stefan LeBlanc (1) and Tyler Graovac (1) that would send the contest to overtime with both clubs securing a point.

Binghamton lost to end their three game winning streak at home while Utica ended their four game losing streak. It was the fifth time for the BDevils to face the Comets in 15 outings this season as the game was chippy with player engagements throughout the night.

Shots ended up in favor of the Comets 35-30.

Seney - Street - Anderson, Conner - McLeod - Bastian, Sharangovich - Maltsev - Studenic, Baddock - Larsson - Schmelzer

Morrow/White, Snuggerud/Paliotta, Mermis/Jacobs

Domingue - Senn

Scratches: Gignac, Speers, Comiskey, Zetterlund, & Melchiori

#1. Ben Street (1g, 1a), #2. Zack MacEwen (1g), #3. Joe Morrow (1g)

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Binghamton Devils Lose a Tough One to Utica Comets in OT - All About The Jersey

Utica Comets: Life after Sven Baertschi, the Nikolay Goldobin situation and Mike DiPietro’s dominant start – The Athletic

BINGHAMTON, N.Y. Its been the very definition of an up-and-down season for the Utica Comets.

The Vancouver Canucks AHL affiliate jumped out to an 8-0-0 start to the season. The Comets were averaging 4.5 goals per game, ventilating the competition.

Then the calendar turned to November and being an AHL affiliate caught up to them.

The Canucks recalled Ashton Sautner and then Sven Baertschi. Sautner returned, then was recalled again.

Adam Gaudette was reassigned, then recalled. Oscar Fantenberg spent two games with the Comets on a conditioning loan. Hes still yet to play for the Canucks.

Reid Boucher scored 10 goals in October and then got hurt. So did Carter Camper. Before back-to-back games this weekend, Vancouver recalled Jalen Chatfield as insurance for Chris Tanev.

Realistically, though, the Comets season can be divided into two parts: with Baertschi and after Baertschi.

Thats...

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Utica Comets: Life after Sven Baertschi, the Nikolay Goldobin situation and Mike DiPietro's dominant start - The Athletic

Comets set their preseason roster – Kirksville Daily Express and Daily News

Bill Althaus bill.althaus@examiner.net @AlthausEJC

TuesdayNov12,2019at12:01AM

Some familiar faces and new names create an interesting scenario for the Kansas City Comets, as the Major Arena Soccer League team announced its preseason roster Monday.

Each MASL team is restricted to 26 registered players. On game days, those rosters will be limited to an active roster of 14 field players and up to two goalkeepers.

The Comets kicked off their preseason training camp Nov. 4, with the franchises all-time caps, goals and assist leader, Leo Gibson, taking the helm as player/coach.

Most of the team has been in camp since day one, while others will join as their contracts and visas are finalized. Others are in camp as trialists, hoping to earn a contract.

Its an exciting time, Gibson said. There are players who return from last years team and some new players. But it feels like a team, like everyone is on the same page.

The season, the Comets 10th, kicks off on the road Nov. 22 in Turlock, Calif., against the Cal Express, with the home opener on Nov. 30 against the St. Louis Ambush at Silverstein Eye Centers Arena.

Goalkeeper Mark Saxby said Gibson has quickly earned the respect of his teammates, as he takes over the player/coach role.

When you look back at the overall process, Leo was the only real choice, Saxby said. We have so much respect for Leo, I think this is going to lead to great things this season.

Added veteran Comets forward John Sosa: We have always respected Leo as a person and a player, and we will show him the same respect as a coach. He brings a love of the game and so much experience and expertise to his new job as the head coach no one knows the game better than Leo.

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MUCC Comets win third football provincial championship in eight years – northeastNOW

Dave Rogers, head coach of the Comets football team, said his players knew they hadnt won anything yet after one half. They knew Martensville was more than capable of scoring 28 points in a quarter like the Comets did in the first.

[Our players] came today prepared mentally with the intensity to impose their will on their opponents, Rogers told northeastNOW. We asked them if they were ready to play football and it was yes coach in a loudness and timbre in the response that I hadnt heard all season, maybe not in a long time. It showed from the first whistle through to the end of the game.

The Comets and Martensville cancelled one another out with a 14-14 score in the second half. The final score was 51-15 for the Comets, as they won their first provincial championship since 2014; their third in eight seasons.

Even though winning by nearly 40 points became a norm for the Comets in 2019, Rogers was still surprised at the championship games point spread.

I knew we had a high-powered offence and wed score some points, he said. We expected their offence which had been very similar to ours to score, but hats off to Coach Russell and his defence for the way they prepared. The defence probably played the best game they played this year.

For the 12 players expecting to graduate from MUCC after the 2019-20 academic year, theres no better way to conclude their secondary school playing careers than with a provincial championship.

However, some of MUCCs Grade 12s could move on to play post-secondary football, whether it be in the Canadian Junior Football League or for a Canadian university. Rogers mentioned Lance Barnett, Mason Gordon-Danku, and Ty Milne as some of the Grade 12s who can move to the next level of football.

After going 6-0 in the regular season and winning all three of their post-season games by nearly 40 points on their way to a provincial championship, Rogers isnt sure where this season ranks compared to other Comets teams hes coached because theyre all different.

Im proud of every team weve coached, he said. [The 2019 team] definitely maximized the potential of their team. This is one of the best offences weve ever coached; we had four exceptional, quality athletes on offence. On defence, we had great kids and played team defence.

Its difficult to compare one championship team to another, or to maybe a team that could have been champions. I try to avoid those comparisons, but one thing that really sets this group apart from what Ive seen is the tightness of everybody on the team. Its not the seniors or the juniors, this year were really the Melfort Comets.

aaron.schulze@jpbg.ca

On Twitter: @SchulzePANow

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MUCC Comets win third football provincial championship in eight years - northeastNOW

Newly Discovered Interstellar Comet Appears Indistinguishable from the Native Solar System Comets – Planetary News

A second interstellar object, designated C/2019 Q4 (2I/Borisov), was discovered on August 30, 2019, by Gennady Borisov at the MARGO observatory in Nauchnij, Crimea. A new paper published in Nature Astronomy reports on the initial characterization of this object using images taken with the William Herschel Telescope and the Gemini North Telescope, which showed an extended coma and a faint, broad tail. 2I/Borisovs high orbital velocity indicates that it originated outside the solar system and is not gravitationally bound to the Sun. This makes it the first certain case of an interstellar comet and the second known interstellar minor body identified in the solar system (after Oumuamua). Moreover, its estimated nucleus size, approximately 1 kilometer, and measured slightly reddish color make it look much more like an ordinary comet than Oumuamua did. Astronomers will continue to study 2I/Borisov as it will make its closest approach to Earth on December 28, 2019 at 1.9 au. READ MORE

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Newly Discovered Interstellar Comet Appears Indistinguishable from the Native Solar System Comets - Planetary News

Beyond Jupiter, Researchers Discovered a ‘Cradle of Comets’ – UANews

Comets are known to have a temper. As they swoop in from the outer edges of our solar system, these icy bodies begin spewing gas and dust as they venture closer to the sun. Their luminous outbursts can result in spectacular sights that grace the night sky for days, weeks or even months.

But comets aren't born that way, and their pathway from their original formation location toward the inner solar system has been debated for a long time. Comets are of great interest to planetary scientists because they are likely to be the most pristine remnants of material left over from the birth of our solar system.

In a study published inThe Astrophysical Journal Letters, a team of researchers including Kathryn Volk and Walter Harris at the University of Arizona Lunar and Planetary Laboratory report the discovery of an orbital region just beyond Jupiter that acts as a "comet gateway." This pathway funnels icy bodies called centaurs from the region of the giant planets Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune into the inner solar system, where they can become regular visitors of Earth's neighborhood, cosmically speaking.

Roughly shaped like an imaginary donut encircling the area, the gateway was uncovered as part of a simulation of centaurs, small icy bodies traveling on chaotic orbits between Jupiter and Neptune.

Centaurs: Icy Rogues on Haphazard Trails

Centaurs are believed to originate in the Kuiper belt, a region populated by icy objects beyond Neptune and extending out to about 50 Astronomical Units, or 50 times the average distance between the sun and the Earth. Close encounters with Neptune nudge some of them onto inward trajectories, and they become centaurs, which act as the source population of the roughly 1,000 short-period comets that zip around the inner solar system. These comets, also known as Jupiter-family comets, or JFCs, include comets visited by spacecraft missions such as Tempel 1 (Deep Impact), Wild 2 (Stardust) and 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko (Rosetta).

"The chaotic nature of their orbits obscures the exact pathways these centaurs follow on their way to becoming JFCs," said Volk, a co-author on the paper and an associate staff scientist who studies Kuiper belt objects, planetary dynamics and planets outside our solar system. "This makes it difficult to figure out where exactly they came from and where they might go in the future."

Jostled by the gravitational fields of several nearby giant planets Jupiter, Saturn and Neptune centaurs dont tend to stick around, making for a high-turnover neighborhood, Harris said.

"They rattle around for a few million years, perhaps a few tens of millions of years, but none of them were there even close to the time when the solar system formed," he said.

"We know of 300 centaurs that we can see through telescopes, but that's only the tip of an iceberg of an estimated 10 million such objects," Harris added.

"Most centaurs we know of weren't discovered until CCD's became available, plus you need the help of a computer to search for these objects," Volk said. "But there is a large bias in observations because the small objects simply aren't bright enough to be detected."

Where Comets Go to Die

Every pass around the sun inflicts more wear and tear on a comet until it eventually breaks apart,has a close encounter with a planet that ejects it from the inner solar system, or its volatiles mostly gas and water are depleted.

"Often, much of the dust remains and coats the surface, so the comet doesn't heat up much anymore and it goes dormant," Harris said.

By some mechanism, a steady supply of "baby comets" must replace those that have run their course, "but until now, we didn't know where they were coming from," he added.

To better understand how centaurs become JFCs, the research team focused on creating computer simulations that could reproduce the orbit of 29P/Schwassmann-Wachmann 1, or SW1, a centaur discovered in 1927 and thought to be about 40 miles across.

SW1 has long puzzled astronomers with its high activity and frequent explosive outbursts despite the fact that is too far from the sun for water ice to melt. Both its orbit and activity put SW1 in an evolutionary middle ground between the other centaurs and the JFCs, and the original goal of the investigation was to explore whether SW1s current circumstances were consistent with the orbital progression of the other centaurs.

To accomplish this, the team modeled the evolution of bodies from beyond Neptunes orbit, through the giant planets region and inside Jupiters orbit.

"The results of our simulation included several findings that fundamentally alter our understanding of comet evolution," Harris said. "Of the new centaurs tracked by the simulation, more than one in five were found to enter an orbit similar to that of SW1 at some point in their evolution."

In other words, even though SW1 appears to be the only large centaur of the handful of objects currently known to occupy the "cradle of comets," it is not the outlier it was thought to be, but rather ordinary for a centaur, according to Harris.

In addition to the commonplace nature of SW1s orbit, the simulations led to an even more surprising discovery.

"Centaurs passing through this region are the source of more than two-thirds of all Jupiter-family comets," Harris said, "making this the primary gateway through which these comets are produced."

"Historically, our assumption has been that the region around Jupiter is fairly empty, cleaned out by the giant planet's gravity, but our results teach us that there is a region that is constantly being fed," Volk says.

This constant source of new objects may help explain the surprising rate of icy body impacts with Jupiter, such as the famous Shoemaker-Levy 9 event in 1994.

A Comet Worthy of Worship

Based on estimates and calculations of the number and size of objects entering, inhabiting and leaving the gateway region, the study predicted it should sustain an average population of about 1,000 Jupiter-family objects, not too far off the 500 that astronomers have found so far.

The results also showed that the gateway region triggers a rapid transition: once a centaur has entered it, it is very likely to become a JFC within a few thousand years, a blink of an eye in solar system timeframes.

The calculations suggest that an object of SW1's size should enter the region every 50,000 years, making it likely that SW1 is the largest centaur to begin this transition in all of recorded human history, Harris and Volk suggest. In fact, SW1 could be on its way to becoming a "super comet" within a few thousand years.

Comparable in size and activity to comet Hale-Bopp, one of the brightest comets of the 20thcentury, SW1 has a 70% chance of becomingwhat could potentially amount to the most spectacular comet humankind has ever seen, the authors suggest.

"Our descendants could be seeing a comet 10 to 100 times more active than the famous Halley comet," Harris said, "except SW1 would be returningevery six to 10 years instead of every 75."

"If there had been a comet this bright in the last 10,000 years we would know about it," Volk said.

"We take this as strong evidence that a similar event has not happened at least since then," Harris said, "because ancient civilizations would not only have recorded the comet, they may have worshiped it!"

The study was co-authored by Gal Sarid and Maria Womack, both of the Florida Space Institute and the University of Central Florida; Jordan Steckloff of the Planetary Science Institute and the University of Texas at Austin; and Laura Woodney of California State University.

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Beyond Jupiter, Researchers Discovered a 'Cradle of Comets' - UANews

Here’s the Picture We’ve Been Waiting for. Hubble’s Photo of Interstellar Comet 2I/Borisov – Universe Today

Leave it up to the good ole Hubble Space Telescope. The workhorse telescope has given us a photo of the new interstellar comet 2I/Borisov. Take that, fancy new telescopes.

2I/Borisov has wandered into our Solar System from the deep cold of interstellar space, but nobody knows from whence it came, or how long its been travelling. Boris only the second object weve observed thats come into our Solar System from somewhere else in the galaxy, and the Hubble snapped photos of it speeding along at about 177,000 kph (110,000 mph.) So far, the Hubble images are the sharpest ones yet.

Our first interstellar visitor was Oumuamua, which sped through our Solar System in 2017. But that object didnt give up its secrets easily. It came and went and generated a lot of clicking and conjecture, and panicky headlines in some quarters. But it had not coma, and no tail, meaning it had no ice. But Boris is clearly a comet.

Comets contain a lot of water ice and other volatiles. When they get close enough to the Sun, some of that ice sublimates into gas, creating the characteristic coma and tail that is clear in many comet images. A coma and a tail are clearly visible in these Hubble images of 2I/Borisov.

Whereas Oumuamua appeared to be a rock, Borisov is really active, more like a normal comet. Its a puzzle why these two are so different, said David Jewitt of the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), in a press release. Jewiit is the leader of the Hubble team who observed the comet.

Of course its more than just a transient piece of curious eye candy. Boris will contain the same building blocks as any other bodies, including planets, in its home solar system. The fact that its behaving like comets in our own Solar System is intriguing too, though its too soon to assume too much as a result of that.

Though another star system could be quite different from our own, the fact that the comets properties appear to be very similar to those of the solar systems building blocks is very remarkable, said Amaya Moro-Martin of the Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore, Maryland.

Hubble captured these images of Boris when it was 418 million km (260 million miles) from Earth. At its closest approach itll be two astronomical units away from the Sun, on December 27th, 2019. As it approaches and recedes, other telescopes will observe it, and well learn more about it.

But we wont have long. At 177,000 kph (110,000 mph) it wont stick around for a portrait session. Its going to fall past the Sun and in mid-2020 itll be as far away as Jupiter. Then itll disappear into interstellar space again. Its traveling so fast it almost doesnt care that the Sun is there, said Jewitt.

Amateur astronomers have discovered a lot of comets, and this one is no exception. Amateur astronomer Gennady Borisov, from Crimea, discovered this one on August 30th, 2019. More observations from other amateur astronomers followed (they all talk to each other, you know.) Professional astronomers got involved too, and eventually the IAUs Minor Planet Center and JPLs Center for Near-Earth Object Studies calculated the trajectory. That confirmed the objects interstellar origins.

We know where most comets come from. They have two sources: the Kuiper Belt and the Oort Cloud, which is still hypothetical at this point. So to have an interstellar comet come barging through our Solar System means we need to update our encyclopedias.

Astronomers think theres probably many more interstellar objects thatll come through our neighborhood. In fact, there may be more passing through right now, but we just cant see them. But we may see more of them once the Large Synoptic Space Telescope gets up and running in 2020. (It may be renamed the Vera Rubin Space Telescope by then.)

We may never know exactly where Boris came from. But we do know that there is a circumstellar disk of icy debris around young stars in other solar systems. Theres a lot of gravitational shenanigans going on those situations, before a solar system settles down. Its possible that the chaos in young solar systems ejects comets and sends them out into interstellar space.

But for now, astronomers will use Hubble to keep an eye on this one as it gets closer. Its likely that as it gets closer to the Sun, therell be more activity and we can find out what its made of.

New comets are always unpredictable, said Max Mutchler, another member of the observing team. They sometimes brighten suddenly or even begin to fragment as they are exposed to the intense heat of the Sun for the first time. Hubble is poised to monitor whatever happens next with its superior sensitivity and resolution.

Thanks Hubble. Keep us informed, please.

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Here's the Picture We've Been Waiting for. Hubble's Photo of Interstellar Comet 2I/Borisov - Universe Today

Annual Orionid Meteor Shower Peaks This Week – YubaNet

Orionid meteors appear every year around this time when Earth travels through an area of space littered with debris from Halleys Comet. Credit: NASA/JPL

October 22, 2019 Editors note: This year, the Orionids are likely to peak on Oct. 22nd and will be visible through the beginning of November.

The Orionids, which peak during mid-October each year, are considered to be one of the most beautiful showers of the year. Orionid meteors are known for their brightness and for their speed. These meteors are fastthey travel at about 148,000 mph (66 km/s) into the Earths atmosphere. Fast meteors can leave glowing trains (incandescent bits of debris in the wake of the meteor) which last for several seconds to minutes. Fast meteors can also sometimes become fireballs: Look for prolonged explosions of light when viewing the Orionid meteor shower.

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The Orionids are also framed by some of the brightest stars in the night sky, which lend a spectacular backdrop for theses showy meteors.

The Orionids are viewable in both the Northern and Southern hemispheres during the hours after midnight. Find an area well away from city or street lights. Come prepared with a sleeping bag, blanket or lawn chair. Lie flat on your back with your feet facing southeast if you are in the Northern Hemisphere or northeast if you are in the Southern Hemisphere, and look up, taking in as much of the sky as possible. In less than 30 minutes in the dark, your eyes will adapt and you will begin to see meteors. Be patient the show will last until dawn, so you have plenty of time to catch a glimpse.

Meteors come from leftover comet particles and bits from broken asteroids. When comets come around the sun, the dust they emit gradually spreads into a dusty trail around their orbits. Every year the Earth passes through these debris trails, which allows the bits to collide with our atmosphere where they disintegrate to create fiery and colorful streaks in the sky.

The Comet

The pieces of space debris that interact with our atmosphere to create the Orionids originate from comet 1P/Halley. Each time that Halley returns to the inner solar system its nucleus sheds ice and rocky dust into space. The dust grains eventually become the Orionids in October and the Eta Aquarids in May if they collide with Earths atmosphere.

Comet Halley takes about 76 years to orbit the sun once. The last time comet Halley was seen by casual observers was in 1986. Comet Halley will not enter the inner solar system again until 2061.

The comet is named for Edmond Halley, who discovered in 1705 that three previous comets seemed to return every 76 years or so and suggested that these sightings were in fact all the same comet. The comet returned as he predicted (after his death) and it was named in Halleys honor. Comet Halley is perhaps the most famous cometit has been sighted for millennia. It is featured on the Bayeux tapestry, which chronicles the Battle of Hastings in 1066.

Comet Halleys dimensions are 16 x 8 x 8 km. It is one of the darkest, or least reflective, objects in the solar system, with an albedo of 0.03.

The Radiant

Their radiantthe point in the sky from which the Orionids appear to come fromis the constellation Orion. The constellation of Orion is also where we get the name for the shower: Orionids. Note: The constellation for which a meteor shower is named only serves to aid viewers in determining which shower they are viewing on a given night. The constellation is not the source of the meteors.

You should not look only to the constellation of Orion to view the Orionidsthey are visible throughout the night sky. It is actually better to view the Orionids from 45 to 90 degrees away from the radiant. They will appear longer and more spectacular from this perspective. If you do look directly at the radiant, you will find that the meteors will be shortthis is an effect of perspective called foreshortening.

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Annual Orionid Meteor Shower Peaks This Week - YubaNet

Kansas City Comets sign two players and other news – The Blue Testament

The Kansas City Comets announced two signings Thursday. Nine-year veteran Lucas Rodriguez and first-time-pro Hector Moy Solorio Villalpando both signed two-year deals prior to the Major Arena Soccer League 2019-20 season.

Rodriguez has played all of his indoor seasons with the Comets, missing only one season since Kansas City returned in 2010 when he was playing outdoor in the NASL.

I would love to be able to finish my indoor career at only one club. I think theres a lot of value in that. Im a loyal person, said Rodriguez via press release. Im just excited to continue to play and represent the city at the highest level and do everything we can to put Kansas Citys name out there where it belongs.

Rodriguez routinely scores in double digits for goals, knocking in 13 for the last two seasons and is a key creator for the Comets. The veteran is often the focus of restarts and can play the sixth attacker role as well.

As one of the top 30 players in this league we look for Lucas to continue to be a playmaker, control the midfield and finish his opportunities, said Brian Budzinski, Comets managing partner via press release. Lucas is one of those players that makes others around him better with his vision and technique in tight spaces.

This will be Solorio Villalpandos first season as a pro after playing NCAA DI at Niagara University, with Kaw Valley FC in USL League Two and in the Sporting Kansas City Academy.

While this is his first professional experience, Solorio Villalpando is no stranger to Silverstein Eye Centers Arena. He was a regular at games while he was growing up and cheering the team on from the supporter section.

Going out and competing, I have high expectations for myself. This is a great opportunity to keep playing soccer, to keep playing the sport I love. Im ready to go and compete. I know I can play. Im just excited to just go out and do the best I can every day, every training session, every game, Solorio Villalpando said in the press release.

There had been some worry amongst fans up until recently when the Ownership and management was restructured that the Midwests most successful indoor team may not return. Those fears were laid to rest with that announcement and since then Brian Budzinski and his staff have been busy making sure they were ready for the next few seasons

The Comets have reached three-year agreements to continue playing home games at the Silverstein Eye Centers Arena and to train at the KC Soccer Dome. Additionally, they have a one-year lease for an office in Hy-Vee Arena.

The Comets are conducting open tryouts this weekend at the Kansas City Soccer Dome. On Saturday (2-4 PM) and Sunday (12-2 PM) talent will be evaluated by veteran players and coaches for the potential to play for the Comets. More info can be found here.

The Comets have not yet named a new head coach after it was announced that indoor soccer legend Kim Roentved would not be returning to lead the team. It has been indicated that an announcement naming the new head coach was not be too far off.

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Kansas City Comets sign two players and other news - The Blue Testament

Baertschi, Goldobin tearing up the AHL, leading Canucks’ farm club to record start – The Province

Canucks fans were downright apoplectic when Sven Baertschi and Nikolay Goldobin hit the waiver wire last month. The two wingers were among the final training camp cuts as Vancouver set its opening-day roster, a decision that angered many in Vancouver who believed the club had enough depth for three dedicated scoring lines.

Baertschi and Goldobin werent happy either.

It was a tough pill to swallow, Baertschi said this weekend after leading the Comets to a 7-1 victory over the Rochester Americans for the Comets fifth consecutive win, and third consecutive rout. But, I knew I was coming to a great place. So, it was something I was looking forward to. For me, it was coming here making a statement that I belong in the NHL. That was my goal. So far, I think it is going well.

It certainly is. While some Canucks fans remain sore about the demotions, there is likely little anger among the Comets fanbase, where Baertschi and Goldobin wasted little time making their case for a quick return to the NHL by leading Utica to an impressive 5-0 record out of the gate. Its the clubs best start in franchise history.

Its clear that the injection of skill up-front has been the secret to Uticas early success. The Comets havent just prevailed in every game theyve played theyve done so decisively, winning each of their last three contests by a margin of four goals or more. Uticas 29 goals for are tops in the league.

Three of Uticas forwards now occupy the top 10 for AHL scoring: as usual, Reid Boucher is up there. The scoring machine leads all AHLers with 10 points, including a mind-boggling 8 goals in just five games. But Goldobin and Baertschi arent far behind, with nine and eight points, respectively, in just four games apiece after missing the season opener.

In the Comets second showing of the season, a 4-3 overtime victory over the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins, the pair made all the difference. Goldobin picked up an assist on the clubs second goal yet another tally by Boucher and Baertschi took over in the final minutes of regulation, setting up captain Carter Bancks game-tying tally with under three minutes remaining before assisting on Lukas Jaseks overtime winner.

Three days later, Goldobin and Baertschi contributed four assists to Uticas third straight win in their home opener, and this weekend, they combined for 10 points in consecutive routs as Utica outscored their opponents by 14 goals.

At times, the pair has made AHL defenders look silly. Goldobin, for instance, dropped jaws during a two-on-one in the home opener by deking his defender straight into the goalmouth before feeding The Big Fella, Zack Macewen, for a tap-in. That highlight-reel goal can be seen at 1:50 of the package below.

On Saturday, the wingers connected on Uticas sixth goal of the game, practically walking the puck into the opposition net after a won faceoff. They look pretty unstoppable here.

On Monday, Goldobin was singled out for praise when he was named the CCM/AHL Player of the Week, on the strength of a three-game run that saw the winger put up back-to-back three-assist games, eight points and a plus-7 rating.

Provided this doesnt pave the way for a trade, as both players have certainly upped their value of late, one wonders when the Canucks brass will decide the duo is too good for this league. Injuries are coming, and as spots open up on the big club, Vancouver suddenly finds themselves with plenty of depth to patch over the inevitable holes. Baertschi and Goldobin make up two-thirds of an NHL scoring line, and with pivot Adam Gaudette sitting in the press box, its clear the Canucks have a readymade trio simply lying in wait.

Still, nobody in Utica will mind if its a long wait. Loaded with NHL-calibre players, the Comets suddenly look like the team to beat perhaps because nobody has managed it since Baertschi and Goldobin arrived.

Both natural playmakers, the pair are also making life easy for some of the Canucks other developing prospects, like Kole Lind, who is off to a hot start on Baertschis line. Lind, who managed just 17 points in 51 games in his rookie season, already has 7 points in 5 games to start this year, and while one could chalk some of this up to progress, its clear that the shifty young winger is thriving alongside talented linemates. Thats a good sign for his future.

But enough about the future. Lets live in the moment, where the Comets are hotter than ever and for now, at least, boast one of the deepest forward groups in the league.

Utica returns to the ice Friday, Oct. 25 when they battle the Binghamton Devils for a chance to move to 6-0. Provided Baertschi and Goldobin remain with the club, we like their chances.

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Baertschi, Goldobin tearing up the AHL, leading Canucks' farm club to record start - The Province

Second Interstellar Visitor is Surprisingly Similar to Comets in Solar System: Study – The Weather Channel

Gemini Observatory two-color composite image of 2I/Borisov

Two years ago, on October 19, 2017, a mysterious, elongated, dark-red object was detected in our solar system cruising at around 315,364 km per hour. After several months of research, scientists suggested that it may even be an alien probe investigating our solar system. It was named Oumuamua, which roughly translates to "visitor from afar, arriving first" in Hawaiian. It was only July 2019 that scientists confirmed that Oumuamua has a purely natural origin.

On August 30, 2019, amateur astronomer Gennady Borisov spotted another mysterious object, brighter than Oumuamua. After thorough analysis, the International Astronomical Union confirmed on September 24 that the object has a highly open orbit (with no specified return to a specific angular position). The union named the object 2I/Borisov, confirming that it is the only second interstellar (travelling from or originating in other star-systems) object identified in our solar system.

Now, European astronomers have described the characteristics of the newly identified interstellar comet, 2I/Borisov in a paper published in Nature Astronomy. The findings suggest that, despite its faraway origin, the new comet has strikingly similar colour and structure to that of any active comet in our solar system. Oumuamua, on the other hand, had unusually elongated shape along with the absence of cometary activity.

"Images taken on 10 and 13 September 2019 UT with the William Herschel Telescope and Gemini North Telescope show an extended coma and a faint, broad tail," write the authors, who add that the nucleus is probably around one kilometre in radius, which is common with Solar System comets.

"Based on these early characteristics, and putting its hyperbolic orbit aside, 2I/Borisov appears indistinguishable from the native Solar System comets," the study says.

A comet is usually a cold, icy celestial body which starts to release gasses upon approaching any star. The defining characteristic for any comet is the long outgassing tail. While the tail can be observed very clearly in case of 2I/Borisov, Oumuamua showed no obvious signs of outgassing. Scientists believe that more such interstellar objects might have entered our solar system in the past, but we haven't been able to spot them either due to small size or lack of technology.

The study says that since 2I/Borisov was discovered while it was approaching the Sun, astronomers will be able to acquire more data before it passes in approximately a year from now. The scientists say that the closest encounter is expected on December 8, 2019.

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Second Interstellar Visitor is Surprisingly Similar to Comets in Solar System: Study - The Weather Channel

Newly discovered comet is confirmed as an interstellar visitor with a surprisingly familiar look – USA TODAY

2I/Borisov is only the second interstellar comet ever detected in our solar system and the first that looks like a traditional comet. USA TODAY

A newly discovered comet is definitely from outside our solar system, scientists confirmed in a studypublished Monday.

The study said that despite the comet's interstellar origin, it lookssurprisingly similar to comets from within thesolar system.

It's only the second interstellar comet ever detected in our solar systemand the first that looks like a traditional comet, thestudy says. The first one, cigar-shaped 'Oumuamua, which was discovered in 2017, did not resemble a comet in the usual sense:

"We immediately noticed the familiar coma and tail that were not seen around 'Oumuamua," said study co-author Michal Drahus ofJagiellonian University in Poland. "This is really cool because it means that our new visitor is one of these mythical and never-before-seen 'real' interstellar comets."

Colin Snodgrass, an astronomer at Edinburgh University, who was not part of the study,told The Guardian that "this appears to be a completely unremarkable comet on a very remarkable orbit.

The interstellar comet 2I/Borisov was captured by the Gemini North telescope on Sept. 10, 2019.(Photo: Gemini Observatory/NSF/AURA)

The comet, dubbed 2I/Borisov, was discovered Aug. 30 by Gennady Borisov at an observatory in Nauchnij, Crimea.

A computer program specifically designed to spot interstellar objects confirmed the discovery in September."This code was written specifically for this purpose, and we really hoped to receive this message one day. We only didn't know when," said Piotr Guzik ofJagiellonian University, who led the study.

2I/Borisov is inbound toward the sun, but it will remain farther than the orbit of Mars and will approach no closer to Earth than about 190 million miles in early December, NASA said.

It won't be visible with the naked eye, but it can be viewed through professional telescopes. "The object will peak in brightness in mid-December and continue to be observable with moderate-size telescopes until April 2020," NASA's Davide Farnocchia saidin astatement in September.

Monday's study was published in the peer-reviewed British journal Nature Astronomy.Scientists saidthis is only a prologue to more thorough investigations and discoveries. "The comet is still emerging from the sun's morning glare and growing in brightness,"said Waclaw Waniak ofJagiellonian University, co-author of the study.

"It will be observable for several months, which makes us believe that the best is yet to come," Waniaksaid.

Guzik said,"We can safely say that research on this body will be transformative for planetary astronomy and a milestone for astronomy in general."

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Newly discovered comet is confirmed as an interstellar visitor with a surprisingly familiar look - USA TODAY

WBS Weekly: Penguins only earn one point in losses to Phantoms, Comets, and Bears – PensBurgh

Friday, October 11: WBS 1 @ Lehigh Valley 4

Going into the first really busy weekend of the new WBS season, it could reasonably be expected that the Penguins would regress a bit, as between their season-opening victory in Hershey and their first visit to Allentown, they lost Sam Lafferty, Andrew Agozzino, Adam Johnson, and Joseph Blandisi to Pittsburgh callups. While it is true that Pittsburgh essentially exchanged Agozzino for Blandisi on Friday, Agozzino did not get back to Allentown in enough time to take part, so thats four top players removed from the WBS forward lines.

WBS needed to be at its absolute best to compete with the Phantoms, who defeated them 4-1 and 3-1 in two separate preseason games. They were not, primarily due to the callups, and it showed, as the Phantoms made a strong resurgence following their season-opening shutout on home ice at the hands of Providence, as four different Phantoms scored to give Lehigh Valley a decisive 4-1 victory over their PA Turnpike rivals.

Kurtis Gabriel opened the scoring at 15:35 of the first after WBS defender Jon Lizotte was dispossessed at his own blue line during a breakout.

Mikhail Vorobyev followed that at 19:24 of the first by burying an excellent cross-zone pass from former WBS Penguin Cal OReilly.

Shots favored the Phantoms 16-2 after the first 20 minutes.

WBS showed some life coming out of the locker rooms, as Stefan Noesen scored his third of the young season on a power play just 38 seconds into the second period.

The Phantoms restored the two-goal lead just 4:01 later in spectacular fashion, as highly touted rookie Joel Farabee, making his professional debut, scored the highlight reel goal of the young season for the Phantoms.

Take a bow, Joel. This writer tips the cap to you. Its gonna be hard to top that highlight.

The goal seemed to stun WBS, as the Phantoms quickly expanded the lead to 4-1 through Chris Bigras, and thats how the game would end.

Final shots on goal were 29-19 to the Phantoms, with WBS goalie Casey DeSmith finishing with 25 saves, and Lehigh Valleys Alex Lyon stopping 18 WBS efforts.

Phantoms forward German Rubtsov took third star honors with two assists, the second assist on Vorobyevs goal and the second assist on Bigrass goal. Gabriel took second honors with his goal, and Farabee finished the star sweep for Lehigh Valley with his highlight reel goal.

Saturday, October 12: Utica 4 @ WBS 3 (OT)

The Penguins returned home for their 21st season home opener on Saturday, hosting the Utica Comets. Just prior to the game, the Penguins announced the release of defender Steve Oleksy from his tryout agreement; whatever the reasoning behind it, Im sure all of the WBS fandom wishes Steve well in whatever comes next.

WBS came out of the gates flying in the first period, controlling the first 15 or so minutes of play, but unfortunately old rival Zane McIntyre was waiting in net, stopping all 10 shots WBS managed in the opening session. Utica eventually built their own momentum late in the first, as Uticas goal-scoring leader last season (31), winger Reid Boucher, tallied twice in the last 2:20 of the first (the second goal was on a PP) to give the Comets a 2-0 lead. The goals were Bouchers third and fourth of the season in only his second game.

To their credit, WBS rebounded nicely in the second period, tying the score in the first half of the second period through the red-hot Stefan Noesen and the newly-crowned captain David Warsofsky.

Noesen now has four goals in 3 games for WBS; this is where I remind you that he signed with WBS on the first day of the AHL season, just one day before WBS opened their schedule.

* shakes head in amazement *

I can also confirm that, while Pittsburgh has changed its goal song away from the Andrew WK hit, the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins still choose to Party Hard after goals.

The second period ended 2-2.

In the third, things started getting testy between the two teams, as it has tended to become lately with these two teams, with big winger Anthony Angello in the middle of it. At 6:48 of the third period, Angello took a roughing penalty; WBS killed it off well, and at the very end, in a scene eerily reminiscent of opening night in Hershey, Jon Lizotte, cleared a puck out of the defensive zone to center ice, where Angello was waiting to collect the puck, break in alone, and do this.

Angello later threw a questionable hit on the side boards, inspiring Uticas Vincent Arsenau to try to fight him and taking a penalty in result.

Turning a 2-0 deficit into a 3-2 lead is to be commended, to be sure, but the sign of a really good team is to get a lead like that and close the door. WBS did not do that on Saturday, conceding the tying goal 2:19 from full time to Carter Bancks.

The game went to overtime, where by any decent metric, WBS dominated, putting six shots on goal compared to Uticas one. The only problem was, again, Zane McIntyre, who stopped all six WBS efforts, and Utica buried their only shot in OT as Lukas Jasek deflected home a floating shot to give the Comets the bonus point.

McIntyre finished with 37 saves on 40 WBS shots for the win, WBS goaltender Emil Larmi finished with 27 saves on 31 shots in his pro debut.

Reid Boucher took third star honors with his two goals; David Warsofsky took second honors with his game-tying goal in the second period and one assist; Jasek took top honors with the game-winner.

Sunday, October 13: WBS 1 @ Hershey 5

No matter whos the coach, no matter whos on the roster, the fact remains that one of the hardest scheduling assignment in the league is the third game of a 3 in 3 weekend, on the road, against a team that is not playing a 3 in 3. WBS faced such a situation to close their second weekend of the season, visiting the Hershey Bears, and the Bears responded in kind with a 5-1 drubbing.

Having just been returned to Hershey after clearing waivers last Monday, Travis Boyd put up another 3 points in his second game for Hershey after also putting up 3 points in his season debut the night before. Against WBS, he opened the scoring on a power play at 15:27 of the first, then assisted on a Matt Moulson PP goal at 17:39 of the first, then scored again at 6:56 of the second for his fourth goal of the season in two games. Hershey also enjoyed a shorthanded goal by Martin Fehervary at 11:02 of the second and Mike Sgarbossas 3rd of the season at 14:31 of the third.

Hershey almost finished the shutout for starting goalie Pheonix Copley, but WBS defender Niclas Almari spoiled the shutout bid with just 1:25 left on the clock to make the final 5-1.

Moulson (goal and assist), Fehervary (shorthanded goal), and Boyd (two goals, one assist) swept the stars.

After only getting one point out of the weekend, WBSs record of 1-2-1 after 4 games is good for only 3 points, tied for worst in the Atlantic with Lehigh Valley (1-1-1) and Bridgeport (1-2-1). Those 3 clubs are four points behind division leader Hartford, who has a record of 3-0-1 after the second weekend.

After the second weekend, only five players for WBS have scored goals. Stefan Noesen has 4 of the teams 9 goals, while Anthony Angello has two and David Warsofsky, Niclas Almari, and Jake Lucchini have one each.

The schedule gets slightly easier this upcoming week for WBS, as they host Binghamton on Wednesday, October 16, at 7:05 pm EDT, then travel to Bridgeport on Saturday, October 19, for a 7:00 pm start.

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WBS Weekly: Penguins only earn one point in losses to Phantoms, Comets, and Bears - PensBurgh

Image of rare blue comet captured by the European Southern Observatory – Digital Trends

This image shows the Oort cloud comet C/2016 R2 (PANSTARRS). ESO / SPECULOOS Team / E. Jehin.

Last year, astronomers in Paris noticed a beautiful and distinctive comet, technically called C/2016 R2 but more colloquially known as the blue comet for its unusual hue. Now, the European Southern Observatory (ESO) has released this new image showing the comet up close.

C/2016 R2 is believed to originate from the Oort Cloud, a distant region of our solar system with objects orbiting the sun that are far beyond even the Kuiper Belt. The cloud consists of billions or even trillions of objects which form a sphere all around our sun, unlike the planets and the Kuiper Belt which form more of a flat disk shape around the sun. This means that the comet has a highly eccentric orbit, being titled at an angle of 58 degrees.

But the far more unusual feature of the comet is its color. Comets and their tails are typically yellow or neutral in shade, due to the way radiation from the sun is scattered by dust. This comet, however, has rare compounds in its coma, or the halo around its core. These compounds include carbon monoxide and nitrogen ions, which give the comet its blue color.

The comas and tails are formed when the comet comes close to the sun. Comets are balls of dust, ice, gas, and rock, the ESO scientists explained in a statement. When they pass close to the sun, their ice warms up, turns to gas, and escapes in a process called outgassing. This process forms fuzzy envelopes around the comets nucleus, called comas, and distinctive tails.

Its rare for a comet such as this to be observed, however. The blue comet circles the sun once every 20,000 years and we dont often see others like it. Comet C/2016 R2 is representative of a family of comets that we observe only rarely each century, the scientists said.

There are two theories for the origin of the comet: Either it is from a rare group of comets from beyond the line at which nitrogen can condense into solid grains. Or it could be a fragment that was knocked off a larger object orbiting beyond Neptune.

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Image of rare blue comet captured by the European Southern Observatory - Digital Trends

Sports Kansas City Comets sign 3-year deal to stay in Independence 41 Action News Staff – KSHB

KANSAS CITY, Mo. Two Kansas City-area sports teams on opposite sides of the metro made announcements about their future Tuesday.

The Kansas City Comets, of the Major Arena Soccer League, announced a three-year agreement to play at Silverstein Eye Center Arena in Independence, Missouri.

Since a revival in 2010, the Comets have played their home games in Independence. Theyll kick off the 10th season in Independence on Nov. 30 against the St. Louis Ambush.

We are thrilled to announce Silverstein Eye Centers Arena through 2022, Comets managing partner Brian Budzinski said in a release. We couldnt be more excited for our fans to see all the upgrades.

Earlier Tuesday , a new ownership group announced plans to buy the Kansas City T-Bones, keeping the team at Village West Stadium in Kansas City, Kansas. The deal still requires final approval.

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Sports Kansas City Comets sign 3-year deal to stay in Independence 41 Action News Staff - KSHB

comet | Definition, Composition, & Facts | Britannica.com

HistoryAncient Greece to the 19th century

The Greek philosopher Aristotle thought that comets were dry exhalations of Earth that caught fire high in the atmosphere or similar exhalations of the planets and stars. However, the Roman philosopher Seneca thought that comets were like the planets, though in much larger orbits. He wrote:

The man will come one day who will explain in what regions the comets move, why they diverge so much from the other stars, what is their size and their nature.

Aristotles view won out and persisted until 1577, when Danish astronomer Tycho Brahe attempted to use parallax to triangulate the distance to a bright comet. Because he could not measure any parallax, Brahe concluded that the comet was very far away, at least four times farther than the Moon.

Brahes student, German astronomer Johannes Kepler, devised his three laws of planetary motion using Brahes meticulous observations of Mars but was unable to fit his theory to the very eccentric orbits of comets. Kepler believed that comets traveled in straight lines through the solar system. The solution came from English scientist Isaac Newton, who used his new law of gravity to calculate a parabolic orbit for the comet of 1680. A parabolic orbit is open, with an eccentricity of exactly 1, meaning the comet would never return. (A circular orbit has an eccentricity of 0.) Any less-eccentric orbits are closed ellipses, which means a comet would return.

Newton was friends with English astronomer Edmond Halley, who used Newtons methods to determine the orbits for 24 observed comets, which he published in 1705. All the orbits were fit with parabolas because the quality of the observations at that time was not good enough to determine elliptical or hyperbolic orbits (eccentricities greater than 1). But Halley noted that the comets of 1531, 1607, and 1682 had remarkably similar orbits and had appeared at approximately 76-year intervals. He suggested that it was really one comet in an approximately 76-year orbit that returned at regular intervals. Halley predicted that the comet would return again in 1758. He did not live to see his prediction come true, but the comet was recovered on Christmas Day, 1758, and passed closest to the Sun on March 13, 1759. The comet was the first recognized periodic comet and was named in Halleys honour, Comet Halley.

Halley also speculated whether comets were members of the solar system or not. Although he could only calculate parabolic orbits, he suggested that the orbits were actually eccentric and closed, writing:

For so their Number will be determinate and, perhaps, not so very great. Besides, the Space between the Sun and the fixd Stars is so immense that there is Room enough for a Comet to revolve tho the period of its Revolution be vastly long.

The German astronomer Johann Encke was the second person to recognize a periodic comet. He determined that a comet discovered by French astronomer Jean-Louis Pons in 1818 did not seem to follow a parabolic orbit. He found that the orbit was indeed a closed ellipse. Moreover, he showed that the orbital period of the comet around the Sun was only 3.3 years, still the shortest orbital period of any comet on record. Encke also showed that the same comet had been observed by French astronomer Pierre Mchain in 1786, by British astronomer Caroline Herschel in 1795, and by Pons in 1805. The comet was named in Enckes honour, as Comet Halley was named for the astronomer who described its orbit.

Enckes Comet soon presented a new problem for astronomers. Because it returned so often, its orbit could be predicted precisely based on Newtons law of gravity, with effects from gravitational perturbations by the planets taken into account. But Enckes Comet repeatedly arrived about 2.5 hours too soon. Its orbit was slowly shrinking. The problem became even more complex when it was discovered that other periodic comets arrived too late. Those include the comets 6P/DArrest, 14P/Wolf 1, and even 1P/Halley, which typically returns about four days later than a purely gravitational orbit would predict.

Several explanations were suggested for this phenomenon, such as a resisting interplanetary medium that caused the comet to slowly lose orbital energy. However, that idea could not explain comets whose orbits were growing, not shrinking. German mathematician and astronomer Friedrich Bessel suggested that expulsion of material from a comet near perihelion was acting like a rocket motor and propelling the comet into a slightly shorter- (or longer-) period orbit each time it passed close to the Sun. History would prove Bessel right.

As the quality of the observations and mathematical techniques to calculate orbits improved, it became obvious that most comets were on elliptical orbits and thus were members of the solar system. Many were recognized to be periodic. But some orbit solutions for long-period comets suggested that they were slightly hyperbolic, suggesting that they came from interstellar space. That problem would not be solved until the 20th century.

Another interesting problem for astronomers was a comet discovered in 1826 by the Austrian military officer and astronomer Wilhelm, Freiherr (baron) von Biela. Calculation of its orbit showed that it, like Enckes Comet, was a short-period comet; it had a period of about 6.75 years. It was only the third periodic comet to be confirmed. It was identified with a comet observed by French astronomers Jacques Lebaix Montaigne and Charles Messier in 1772 and by Pons in 1805, and it returned, as predicted, in 1832. In 1839 the comet was too close in the sky to the Sun and could not be observed, but it was seen again on schedule in November 1845. On January 13, 1846, American astronomer Matthew Maury found that there was no longer a single comet: there were two, following each other closely around the Sun. The comets returned as a pair in 1852 but were never seen again. Searches for the comets in 1865 and 1872 were unsuccessful, but a brilliant meteor shower appeared in 1872 coming from the same direction from which the comets should have appeared. Astronomers concluded that the meteor shower was the debris of the disrupted comets. However, they were still left with the question as to why the comet broke up. That recurring meteor shower is now known as the Andromedids, named for the constellation in the sky where it appears to radiate from, but is also sometimes referred to as the Bielids.

The study of meteor showers received a huge boost on November 12 and 13, 1833, when observers saw an incredible meteor shower, with rates of hundreds and perhaps thousands of meteors per hour. That shower was the Leonids, so named because its radiant (or origin) is in the constellation Leo. It was suggested that Earth was encountering interplanetary debris spread along the Earth-crossing orbits of yet unknown bodies in the solar system. Further analysis showed that the orbits of the debris were highly eccentric.

American mathematician Hubert Newton published a series of papers in the 1860s in which he examined historical records of major Leonid meteor showers and found that they occurred about every 33 years. That showed that the Leonid particles were not uniformly spread around the orbit. He predicted another major shower for November 1866. As predicted, a large Leonid meteor storm occurred on November 13, 1866. In the same year, Italian astronomer Giovanni Schiaparelli computed the orbit of the Perseid meteor shower, usually observed on August 1012 each year, and noted its strong similarity to the orbit of Comet Swift-Tuttle (109P/1862 O1) discovered in 1862. Soon after, the Leonids were shown to have an orbit very similar to Comet Tempel-Tuttle (55P/1865 Y1), discovered in 1865. Since then the parent comets of many meteoroid streams have been identified, though the parent comets of some streams remains a mystery.

Meanwhile, the study of comets benefitted greatly from the improvement in the quality and size of telescopes and the technology for observing comets. In 1858 English portrait artist William Usherwood took the first photograph of a comet, Comet Donati (C/1858 L1), followed by American astronomer George Bond the next night. The first photographic discovery of a comet was made by American astronomer Edward Barnard in 1892, while he was photographing the Milky Way. The comet, which was in a short-period orbit, was known as D/Barnard 3 because it was soon lost, but it was recovered by Italian astronomer Andrea Boattini in 2008 and is now known as Comet Barnard/Boattini (206P/2008 T3). In 1864 Italian astronomer Giovanni Donati was the first to look at a comet through a spectroscope, and he discovered three broad emission bands that are now known to be caused by long-chain carbon molecules in the coma. The first spectrogram (a spectrum recorded on film) was of Comet Tebbutt (C/1881 K1), taken by English astronomer William Huggins on June 24, 1881. Later the same night, an American doctor and amateur astronomer, Henry Draper, took spectra of the same comet. Both men later became professional astronomers.

Some years before the appearance of Comet Halley in 1910, the molecule cyanogen was identified as one of the molecules in the spectra of cometary comae. Cyanogen is a poisonous gas derived from hydrogen cyanide (HCN), a well-known deadly poison. It was also detected in Halleys coma as that comet approached the Sun in 1910. That led to great consternation as Earth was predicted to pass through the tail of the comet. People panicked, bought comet pills, and threw end-of-the-world parties. But when the comet passed by only 0.15 AU away on the night of May 1819, 1910, there were no detectable effects.

The 20th century saw continued progress in cometary science. Spectroscopy revealed many of the molecules, radicals, and ions in the comae and tails of comets. An understanding began to develop about the nature of cometary tails, with the ion (Type I) tails resulting from the interaction of ionized molecules with some form of corpuscular radiation, possibly electrons and protons, from the Sun, and the dust (Type II) tails coming from solar radiation pressure on the fine dust particles emitted from the comet.

Astronomers continued to ask, Where do the comets come from? There were three schools of thought: (1) that comets were captured from interstellar space, (2) that comets were erupted out of the giant planets, or (3) that comets were primeval matter that had not been incorporated into the planets. The first idea had been suggested by French mathematician and astronomer Pierre Laplace in 1813, while the second came from another French mathematician-astronomer, Joseph Lagrange. The third came from English astronomer George Chambers in 1910.

The idea of an interstellar origin for comets ran into some serious problems. First, astronomers showed that capture of an interstellar comet by Jupiter, the most massive planet, was a highly unlikely event and probably could not account for the number of short-period comets then known. Also, no comets had ever been observed on truly hyperbolic orbits. Some long-period comets did have orbit solutions that were slightly hyperbolic, barely above an eccentricity of 1.0. But a truly hyperbolic comet approaching the solar system with the Suns velocity relative to the nearby stars of about 20 km (12 miles) per second would have an eccentricity of 2.0.

In 1914 Swedish-born Danish astronomer Elis Strmgren published a special list of cometary orbits. Strmgren took the well-determined orbits of long-period comets and projected them backward in time to before the comets had entered the planetary region. He then referenced the orbits to the barycentre (the centre of mass) of the entire solar system. He found that most of the apparently hyperbolic orbits became elliptical. That proved that the comets were members of the solar system. Orbits of that type are referred to as original orbits, whereas the orbit of a comet as it passes through the planetary region is called the osculating (or instantaneous) orbit, and the orbit after the comet has left the planetary region is called the future orbit.

The idea of comets erupting from giant planets was favoured by the Soviet astronomer Sergey Vsekhsvyatsky based on similar molecules having been discovered in both the atmospheres of the giant planets and in cometary comae. The idea helped to explain the many short-period comets that regularly encountered Jupiter. But the giant planets have very large escape velocities, about 60 km (37 miles) per second in the case of Jupiter, and it was difficult to understand what physical process could achieve those velocities. So Vsekhsvyatsky moved the origin sites to the satellites of the giant planets, which had far lower escape velocities. However, most scientists still did not believe in the eruption model. The discovery of volcanos on Jupiters large satellite Io by the Voyager 1 spacecraft in 1979 briefly resurrected the idea, but Ios composition proved to be a very poor match to the composition of comets.

Another idea about cometary origins was promoted by the English astronomer Raymond Lyttleton in a research paper in 1951 and a book, The Comets and Their Origin, in 1953. Because it was known that some comets were associated with meteor showers observed on Earth, the sandbank model suggested that a comet was simply a cloud of meteoritic particles held together by its own gravity. Interplanetary gases were adsorbed on the surfaces of the dust grains and escaped when the comet came close to the Sun and the particles were heated. Lyttleton went on to explain that comets were formed when the Sun and solar system passed through an interstellar dust cloud. The Suns gravity focused the passing dust in its wake, and these subclouds then collapsed under their own gravity to form the cometary sandbanks.

One problem with that theory was that Lyttleton estimated that the gravitational focusing by the Sun would bring the particles together only about 150 AU behind the Sun and solar system. But that did not agree well with the known orbits of long-period comets, which showed no concentration of comets that would have formed at that distance or in that direction. In addition, the total amount of gases that could be adsorbed on a sandbank cloud was not sufficient to explain the measured gas production rates of many observed comets.

In 1948 Dutch astronomer Adrianus van Woerkom, as part of his Ph.D. thesis work at the University of Leiden, examined the role of Jupiters gravity in changing the orbits of comets as they passed through the planetary system. He showed that Jupiter could scatter the orbits in energy, leading to either longer or shorter orbital periods and correspondingly to larger or smaller orbits. In some cases the gravitational perturbations from Jupiter were sufficient to change the previously elliptical orbits of the comets to hyperbolic, ejecting them from the solar system and sending them into interstellar space. Van Woerkom also showed that because of Jupiter, repeated passages of comets through the solar system would lead to a uniform distribution in orbital energy for the long-period comets, with as many long-period comets ending in very long-period orbits as in very short-period orbits. Finally, van Woerkom showed that Jupiter would eventually eject all the long-period comets to interstellar space over a time span of about one million years. Thus, the comets needed to be resupplied somehow.

Van Woerkoms thesis adviser was the Dutch astronomer Jan Oort, who had become famous in the 1920s for his work on the structure and rotation of the Milky Way Galaxy. Oort became interested in the problem of where the long-period comets came from. Building on van Woerkoms work, Oort closely examined the energy distribution of long-period comet original orbits as determined by Strmgren. He found that, as van Woerkom had predicted, there was a uniform distribution of orbital energies for most energy values. But, surprisingly, there was also a large excess of comets with orbital semimajor axes (half of the long axis of the comets elliptical orbit) larger than 20,000 AU.

Oort suggested that the excess of orbits at very large distances could only be explained if the long-period comets came from there. He proposed that the solar system was surrounded by a vast cloud of comets that stretched halfway to the nearest stars. He showed that gravitational perturbations by random passing stars would perturb the orbits in the comet cloud, occasionally sending a comet into the planetary region where it could be observed. Oort referred to those comets making their first passage through the planetary region as new comets. As the new comets pass through the planetary region, Jupiters gravity takes control of their orbits, spreading them in orbital energy, and either capturing them to shorter periods or ejecting them to interstellar space.

Based on the number of comets seen each year, Oort estimated that the cloud contained 190 billion comets; today that number is thought to be closer to one trillion comets. Oorts hypothesis was all the more impressive because it was based on accurate original orbits for only 19 comets. In his honour, the cloud of comets surrounding the solar system is called the Oort cloud.

Oort noticed that the number of long-period comets returning to the planetary system was far less than what his model predicted. To account for that, he suggested that the comets were physically lost by disruption (as had happened to Bielas Comet). Oort proposed two values for the disruption rate of comets on each perihelion passage, 0.3 and 1.9 percent, which both gave reasonably good results when comparing his predictions with the actual energy distribution, except for an excess of new comets at near-zero energy.

In 1979 American astronomer Paul Weissman (the author of this article) published computer simulations of the Oort cloud energy distribution using planetary perturbations by Jupiter and Saturn and physical models of loss mechanisms such as random disruption and formation of a nonvolatile crust, based on actual observations of comets. He showed that a very good agreement with the observed energy distribution could be obtained if new comets were disrupted about 10 percent of the time on the first perihelion passage from the Oort cloud and about 4 percent of the time on subsequent passages. Also, comet nuclei developed nonvolatile crusts, cutting off all coma activity, after about 10100 returns, on average.

In 1981 American astronomer Jack Hills suggested that in addition to the Oort cloud there was also an inner cloud extending inward toward the planetary region to about 1,000 AU from the Sun. Comets are not seen coming from this region because their orbits are too tightly bound to the Sun; stellar perturbations are typically not strong enough to change their orbits significantly. Hills hypothesized that only if a star came very close, even penetrating through the Oort cloud, could it excite the orbits of the comets in the inner cloud, sending a shower of comets into the planetary system.

But where did the Oort cloud come from? At large distances on the order of 104105 AU from the Sun, the solar nebula would have been too thin to form large bodies like comets that are several kilometres in diameter. The comets had to have formed much closer to the planetary region. Oort suggested that the comets were thrown out of the asteroid belt by close encounters with Jupiter. At that time it was not known that most asteroids are rocky, carbonaceous, or iron bodies and that only a fraction contain any water.

Oorts work was preceded in part by that of the Estonian astronomer Ernst pik. In 1932 pik published a paper examining what happened to meteors or comets scattered to very large distances from the Sun, where they could be perturbed by random passing stars. He showed that the gravitational tugs from the stars would raise the perihelion distances of most objects to beyond the most distant planet. Thus, he predicted that there would be a cloud of comets surrounding the solar system. However, pik said little about the comets returning to the planetary region, other than that some comets could be thrown into the Sun by the stars during their evolution outward to the cloud. Indeed, pik concluded:

comets of an aphelion distance exceeding 10,000 a.u., are not very likely to occur among the observable objects, because of the rapid increase of the average perihelion distance due to stellar perturbations.

pik also failed to make any comparison between his results and the known original orbits of the long-period comets.

Oorts paper, published in 1950, revolutionized the field of cometary dynamics. Two months later a paper on the nature of the cometary nucleus by Fred Whipple would do the same for cometary physics. Whipple combined many of the ideas of the day and suggested that the cometary nucleus was a solid body made up of volatile ices and meteoritic material. That was called the icy conglomerate model but also became more popularly known as the dirty snowball.

Whipple provided proof for his model in the form of the shrinking orbit of Enckes Comet. Whipple believed that, as Bessel had suggested, rocket forces from sublimating ices on the sunlit side of the nucleus would alter the comets orbit. For a nonrotating solid nucleus, the force would push the nucleus away from the Sun, appearing to lessen the effect of gravity. But if the comet nucleus was rotating (as most solar system bodies do) and if the rotation pole was not perpendicular to the plane of the comets orbit, both tangential forces (forward or backward along the comets direction of motion) and out-of-plane forces (up or down) could result. The effect was helped by the thermal lag caused by the Sun continuing to heat the nucleus surface after local noontime, just as temperatures on Earth are usually at their maximum a few hours after local noon.

Thus, Whipple explained the slow shrinking of Enckes orbit as the result of tangential forces that were pointed opposite to the comets direction of motion, causing the comet nucleus to slow down, slowly shrinking the orbit. That model also explained periodic comets whose orbits were growing, such as DArrest and Wolf 1, depending on the direction of the nucleis rotation poles and the direction in which the nuclei were rotating. Because the rocket force results from the high activity of the comet nucleus near perihelion, the force does not change the perihelion distance but rather the aphelion distance, either raising or lowering it.

Whipple also pointed out that the loss of cometary ices would leave a layer of nonvolatile material on the surface of the nucleus, making sublimation more difficult, as the heat from the Sun needed to filter down through multiple layers to where there were fresh ices. Furthermore, Whipple suggested that the solar systems zodiacal dust cloud came from dust released by comets as they passed through the planetary system.

Whipples ideas set off an intense debate over whether the nucleus was a solid body or not. Many scientists still advocated Lyttletons idea of a sandbank nucleus, simply a cloud of meteoritic material with adsorbed gases. The question would not be put definitively to rest until the first spacecraft encounters with Halleys Comet in 1986.

Solid proof for Whipples nongravitational force model came from English astronomer Brian Marsden, a colleague of Whipples at the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Marsden was an expert on comet and asteroid orbits and tested Whipples icy conglomerate model against the orbits of many known comets. Using a computer program that determined the orbits of comets and asteroids from observations, Marsden added a term for the expected rocket effect when the comet was active. In this he was aided by Belgian astronomer Armand Delsemme, who carefully calculated the rate of water ice sublimation as a function of a comets distance from the Sun.

When one calculates an orbit for an object, the calculation usually does not fit all the observed positions of the object perfectly. Small errors creep into the observed positions for many reasons, such as not knowing the exact time of the observations or finding the positions using an out-of-date star catalog. So every orbit fit has a mean residual, which is the average difference between the observations and the comets predicted position based on the newly determined orbit. Mean residuals of less than about 1.5 arc seconds are considered a good fit.

When Marsden calculated the comet orbits, he found that he could obtain smaller mean residuals if he included the rocket force in his calculations. Marsden found that for a short-period comet, the magnitude of the rocket force was typically only a few hundred-thousandths of the solar gravitational attraction, but that was enough to change the time when the comet would return. Later, Marsden and colleagues computed the rocket forces for long-period comets and found that there too the mean residuals were reduced. For the long-period comets, the rocket force was typically a few ten-thousandths of the solar gravitational attraction. Long-period comets tend to be far more active than short-period comets, and thus for them the force is larger.

A further interesting result of Marsdens work was that when he performed his calculations on apparently hyperbolic comet orbits, the resulting eccentricities often changed from hyperbolic to elliptical. Very few comets were left with hyperbolic original orbits, and all of those were only slightly hyperbolic. Marsden had provided further proof that all long-period comets were members of the solar system.

In 1951 the Dutch American astronomer Gerard Kuiper published an important paper on where the comets had formed. Kuiper was studying the origin of the solar system and suggested that the volatile molecules, radicals, and ions observed in cometary comae and tails (e.g., CH, NH, OH, CN, CO+, CO2+, N2+) must come from ices frozen in the solid nucleus (e.g., CH4, NH3, H2O, HCN, CO, CO2, and N2). But those ices could only condense in the solar nebula where it was very cold. So he suggested that comets had formed at 3850 AU from the Sun, where mean temperatures were only about 3045 K (243 to 228 C, or 406 to 379 F).

Kuiper suggested that the solar nebula did not end at the orbit of what was then considered the most distant planet, Pluto, at about 39 AU, but that it continued on to about 50 AU. He believed that at those large distances from the Sun neither the density of solar nebula material nor the time was enough to form another planet. Rather, he suggested that there would be a belt of smaller bodiesi.e., cometsbetween 38 and 50 AU. He also suggested that Pluto would dynamically eject comets from that region to distant orbits, forming the Oort cloud.

Astronomers have since discovered that Pluto is too small to have done that job (or even to be considered a planet), and it is really Neptune at 30 AU that defines the outer boundary of the planetary system. Neptune is large enough to slowly scatter comets both inward to short-period orbits and outward to the Oort cloud, along with some help from the other giant planets.

Kuipers 1951 paper did not achieve the same fame as those by Oort and Whipple in 1950, but astronomers occasionally followed up his ideas. In 1968 Egyptian astronomer Salah Hamid worked with Whipple and Marsden to study the orbits of seven comets that passed near the region of Kuipers hypothetical comet belt beyond Neptune. They found no evidence of gravitational perturbations from the belt and set upper limits on the mass of the belt of 0.5 Earth masses out to 40 AU and 1.3 Earth masses out to 50 AU.

The situation changed in 1980 when Uruguayan astronomer Julio Fernndez suggested that a comet belt beyond Neptune would be a good source for the short-period comets. Up until that time it was thought that short-period comets were long-period comets from the Oort cloud that had dynamically evolved to short-period orbits because of planetary perturbations, primarily by Jupiter. But astronomers who tried to simulate that process on computers found that it was very inefficient and likely could not supply new short-period comets fast enough to replace the existing ones that either were disrupted, faded away, or were perturbed out of the planetary region.

Fernndez recognized that a key element in understanding the short-period comets was their relatively low-inclination orbits. Typical short-period comets have orbital inclinations up to about 35, whereas long-period comets have completely random orbital inclinations from 0 to 180. Fernndez suggested that the easiest way to produce a low-inclination short-period comet population was to start with a source that had a relatively low inclination. Kuipers hypothesized comet belt beyond Neptune fit this requirement. Fernndez used dynamical simulations to show how comets could be perturbed by larger bodies in the comet belt, on the order of the size of Ceres, the largest asteroid (diameter of about 940 km [580 miles]), and be sent into orbits that could encounter Neptune. Neptune then could pass about half of the comets inward to Uranus, with the other half being sent outward to the Oort cloud. In that manner, comets could be handed down to each giant planet and finally to Jupiter, which placed the comets in short-period orbits.

Fernndezs paper renewed interest in a possible comet belt beyond Neptune. In 1988 American astronomer Martin Duncan and Canadian astronomers Thomas Quinn and Scott Tremaine built a more complex computer simulation of the trans-Neptunian comet belt and again showed that it was the likely source of the short-period comets. They also proposed that the belt be named in honour of Gerard Kuiper, based on the predictions of his 1951 paper. As fate would have it, the distant comet belt had also been predicted in two lesser-known papers in 1943 and 1949 by a retired Irish army officer and astronomer, Kenneth Edgeworth. Therefore, some scientists refer to the comet belt as the Kuiper belt, while others call it the Edgeworth-Kuiper belt.

Astronomers at observatories began to search for the distant objects. In 1992 they were finally rewarded when British astronomer David Jewitt and Vietnamese American astronomer Jane Luu found an object well beyond Neptune in an orbit with a semimajor axis of 43.9 AU, an eccentricity of only 0.0678, and an inclination of only 2.19. The object, officially designated (15760) 1992 QB1, has a diameter of about 200 km (120 miles). Since 1992 more than 1,500 objects have been found in the Kuiper belt, some almost as large as Pluto. In fact, it was the discovery of that swarm of bodies beyond Neptune that led to Pluto being recognized in 2006 as simply one of the largest bodies in the swarm and no longer a planet. (The same thing happened to the largest asteroid Ceres in the mid-19th century when it was recognized as simply the largest body in the asteroid belt and not a true planet.)

In 1977 American astronomer Charles Kowal discovered an unusual object orbiting the Sun among the giant planets. Named 2060 Chiron, it is about 200 km (120 miles) in diameter and has a low-inclination orbit that stretches from 8.3 AU (inside the orbit of Saturn) to 18.85 AU (just inside the orbit of Uranus). Because it can make close approaches to those two giant planets, the orbit is unstable on a time span of several million years. Thus, Chiron likely came from somewhere else. Even more interesting, several years later Chiron began to display a cometary coma even though it was still very far from the Sun. Chiron is one of a few objects that appear in both asteroid and comet catalogs; in the latter it is designated 95 P/Chiron.

Chiron was the first of a new class of objects in giant-planet-crossing orbits to be discovered. The searches for Kuiper belt objects have also led to the discovery of many similar objects orbiting the Sun among the giant planets. Collectively they are now known as the Centaur objects. About 300 such objects have now been found, and more than a few also show sporadic cometary activity.

The Centaurs appear to be objects that are slowly diffusing into the planetary region from the Kuiper belt. Some will eventually be seen as short-period comets, while most others will be thrown into long-period orbits or even ejected to interstellar space.

In 1996 European astronomers Eric Elst and Guido Pizarro found a new comet, which was designated 133P/Elst-Pizarro. But when the orbit of the comet was determined, it was found to lie in the outer asteroid belt with a semimajor axis of 3.16 AU, an eccentricity of 0.162, and an inclination of only 1.39. A search of older records showed that 133P had been observed previously in 1979 as an inactive asteroid. So it is another object that was catalogued as both a comet and an asteroid.

The explanation for 133P was that, given its position in the asteroid belt, where maximum solar surface temperatures are only about 48 C (54 F), it likely acquired some water in the form of ice from the solar nebula. Like in comets, the ices near the surface of 133P sublimated early in its history, leaving an insulating layer of nonvolatile material covering the ice at depth. Then a random impact from a piece of asteroidal debris punched through the insulating layer and exposed the buried ice. Comet 133P has shown regular activity at the same location in its orbit for at least three orbits since it was discovered.

Twelve additional objects in asteroidal orbits have been discovered since that time, most of them also in the outer main belt. They are sometimes referred to as main belt comets, though the more recently accepted term is active asteroids.

The latter half of the 20th century saw a massive leap forward in the understanding of the solar system as a result of spacecraft visits to the planets and their satellites. Those spacecraft collected a wealth of scientific data close up and in situ. The anticipated return of Halleys Comet in 1986 provided substantial motivation to begin using spacecraft to study comets.

The first comet mission (of a sort) was the International Cometary Explorer (ICE) spacecrafts encounter with Comet 21P/Giacobini-Zinner on September 11, 1985. The mission had originally been launched as part of a joint project by the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the European Space Agency (ESA) known as the International Sun-Earth Explorer (ISEE). The mission consisted of three spacecraft, two of them, ISEE-1 and -2, in Earth orbit and the third, ISEE-3, positioned in a heliocentric orbit between Earth and the Sun, studying the solar wind in Earths vicinity.

In 1982 and 1983 engineers maneuvered ISEE-3 to accomplish several gravity-assist encounters with the Moon, which put it on a trajectory to encounter 21P/Giacobini-Zinner. The spacecraft was targeted to pass through the ion tail of the comet, about 7,800 km (4,800 miles) behind the nucleus at a relative velocity of 21 km (13 miles) per second, and returned the first in situ measurements of the magnetic field, plasma, and energetic particle environment inside a comets tail. Those measurements confirmed the model of the comets ion tail first put forward in 1957 by the Swedish physicist (and later Nobel Prize winner) Hannes Alfvn. It also showed that H2O+ was the most common ion in the plasma tail, consistent with the Whipple model of an icy conglomerate nucleus. However, ICE carried no instruments to study the nucleus or coma of the comet.

In 1986 five spacecraft were sent to encounter Halleys Comet. They were informally known as the Halley Armada and consisted of two Japanese spacecraft, Suisei and Sakigake (Japanese for comet and pioneer, respectively); two Soviet spacecraft, Vega 1 and 2 (a contraction of Venus-Halley using Cyrillic spelling); and an ESA spacecraft, Giotto (named after the Italian painter who depicted the Star of Bethlehem as a comet in a fresco painted in 130506).

Suisei flew by Halley on March 8, 1986, at a distance of 151,000 km (94,000 miles) on the sunward side and produced ultraviolet images of the comets hydrogen corona, an extension of the visible coma seen only in ultraviolet light. It also measured the energetic particle environment in the solar wind ahead of the comet. Sakigakes closest approach to the comet was on March 11, 1986, at a distance of 6.99 million km (4.34 million miles), and it made additional measurements of the solar wind.

Before flying past Halleys Comet, the two Soviet spacecraft had flown by Venus and had each dropped off landers and balloons to study that planet. Vega 1 flew through the Halley coma on March 6, 1986, to within 8,889 km (5,523 miles) of the nucleus and made numerous measurements of the coma gas and dust composition, plasma and energetic particles, and magnetic field environment. It also returned the first picture ever of a solid cometary nucleus. Unfortunately, the camera was slightly out of focus and had other technical problems that required considerable image processing to see the nucleus. Vega 2 fared much better when it flew through the Halley coma on March 9 to within 8,030 km (4,990 miles) of the nucleus, and its images clearly showed a peanut-shaped nucleus about 16 by 8 km (10 by 5 miles) in diameter. The nucleus was also very dark, reflecting only about 4 percent of the incident sunlight, which had already been established from Earth-based observations.

Both Vega spacecraft carried infrared spectrometers designed to measure the temperature of the Halley nucleus. They found quite warm temperatures between 320 and 400 K (47 and 127 C [116 and 260 F]). That surprised many scientists who had predicted that the effect of water ice sublimation would be to cool the nucleuss surface; water ice requires a great deal of heat to sublimate. The high temperatures suggested that much of the nucleuss surface was not sublimating, but why?

Whipples classic paper in 1950 had suggested that as comets lost material from the surface, some particles were too heavy to escape the weak gravity of the nucleus and fell back onto the surface, forming a lag deposit. That idea was later studied by American astronomer and author David Brin in his thesis work with his adviser, Sri Lankan physicist Asoka Mendis, in 1979. As the lag deposit built up, it would effectively insulate the icy materials below it from sunlight. Calculations showed that a layer only 10100 cm (439 inches) in thickness could completely turn off sublimation from the surface. Brin and Mendis predicted that Halley would be so active that it would blow away any lag deposit, but that was not the case. Only about 30 percent of Halleys sunlit hemisphere was active. Bright dust jets could be seen coming from specific areas on the nucleus surface, but much of the surface showed no visible activity.

Giotto flew through Halleys coma on March 14, 1986, and passed only 596 km (370 miles) from the nucleus. It returned the highest-resolution images of the nucleus and showed a very rugged terrain with mountain peaks jutting up hundreds of metres from the surface. It also showed the same peanut shape that Vega 2 saw but from a different viewing angle and with much greater visible detail. Discrete dust jets were coming off the nucleus surface, but the resolution was not good enough to reveal the source of the jets.

Giotto and both Vega spacecraft obtained numerous measurements of the dust and gas in the coma. Dust particles came in two types: silicate and organic. The silicate grains were typical of rocks found on Earth such as forsterite (Mg2SiO4), a high-temperature mineralthat is, one which would be among the first to condense out of the hot solar nebula. Analyses of other grains showed that the comet was far richer in magnesium relative to iron. The organic grains were composed solely of the elements carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen and were called CHON grains based on the chemical symbol for each of those elements. Larger grains were also detected that were combinations of silicate and CHON grains, supporting the view that comet nuclei had accreted from the slow aggregation of tiny particles in the solar nebula.

The three spacecraft also measured gases in the coma, water being the dominant molecule but also carbon monoxide accounting for about 7 percent of the gas relative to water. Formaldehyde, carbon dioxide, and hydrogen cyanide were also detected at a few percent relative to water.

The Halley Armada was a rousing success and resulted from international cooperation by many nations. Its success is even more impressive when one considers that the spacecraft all flew by the Halley nucleus at velocities ranging from 68 to 79 km per second (152,000 to 177,000 miles per hour). (The velocities were so high because Halleys retrograde orbit had it going around the Sun in the opposite direction from the spacecraft.)

Giotto was later retargeted using assists from Earths gravity to pass within about 200 km (120 miles) of the nucleus of the comet 26P/Grigg-Skjellrup. The flyby was successful, but some of the scientific instruments, including the camera, were no longer working after being sandblasted at Halley.

The next comet mission was not until 1998, when NASA launched Deep Space 1, a spacecraft designed to test a variety of new technologies. After flying past the asteroid 9969 Braille in 1999, Deep Space 1 was retargeted to fly past the comet 19P/Borrelly on September 22, 2001. Images of the Borrelly nucleus showed it to be shaped like a bowling pin, with very rugged terrain on parts of its surface and mesa-like formations over a large area of it. Individual dust and gas jets were seen emanating from the surface, but the activity was far less than that of Halleys Comet.

The NASA Stardust mission was launched in 1999 with the goal of collecting samples of dust from the coma of Comet 81P/Wild 2. At a flyby speed of 6.1 km per second (13,600 miles per hour), the dust samples would be completely destroyed by impact with a hard collector. Therefore, Stardust used a material made of silica (sand) called aerogel that had a very low density, approaching that of air. The idea was that the aerogel would slow the dust particles without destroying them, much as a detective might shoot a bullet into a box full of cotton in order to collect the undamaged bullet. It worked, and thousands of fine dust particles were returned to Earth in 2006. Perhaps the biggest surprise was that the sample contained high-temperature materials that must have formed much closer to the Sun than where the comets formed in the outer solar system. That unexpected result meant that material in the solar nebula had been mixed, at least from the inside outward, during the formation of the planets.

Stardusts images of the nucleus of Wild 2 showed a surface that was radically different from either Halley or Borrelly. The surface appeared to be covered with large flat-floored depressions. Those were likely not impact craters, as they did not have the correct morphology and there were far too many large ones. There was some suggestion that it was a very new cometary surface on a nucleus that had not been close to the Sun before. Support for that was the fact that Wild 2 had been placed into its current orbit by a close Jupiter approach in 1974, reducing the perihelion distance to about 1.5 AU (224 million km, or 139 million miles). Before the Jupiter encounter, its perihelion was 4.9 AU (733 million km, or 455 million miles), beyond the region where water ice sublimation is significant.

In 2002 NASA launched a mission called Contour (Comet Nucleus Tour) that was to fly by Enckes Comet and 73P/Schwassman-Wachmann 3 and possibly continue on to 6P/DArrest. Unfortunately, the spacecraft structure failed when leaving Earth orbit.

In 2005 NASA launched yet another comet mission, called Deep Impact. It consisted of two spacecraft, a mother spacecraft that would fly by Comet 9P/Tempel 1 and a daughter spacecraft that would be deliberately crashed into the comet nucleus. The mother spacecraft would take images of the impact. The daughter spacecraft contained its own camera system to image the nucleus surface up to the moment of impact. To maximize the effect of the impact, the daughter spacecraft contained 360 kg (794 pounds) of solid copper. The predicted impact energy was equivalent to 4.8 tonnes of TNT.

The two spacecraft encountered Tempel 1 on July 4, 2005. The impactor produced the highest-resolution pictures of a nucleus surface ever, imaging details less than 10 metres (33 feet) in size. The mother spacecraft watched the explosion and saw a huge cloud of dust and gas emitted from the nucleus. One of the mission goals was to image the crater made by the explosion, but the dust cloud was so thick that the nucleus surface could not be seen through it. Because the mission was a flyby, the mother spacecraft could not wait around for the dust to clear.

Images of the Tempel 1 nucleus were very different from what had been seen before. The surface appeared to be old, with examples of geologic processes having occurred. There was evidence of dust flows across the nucleus surface and what appeared to be two modest-sized impact craters. There was evidence of material having been eroded away. For the first time, icy patches were discovered in some small areas of the nucleus surface.

For the first time, a mission was also able to measure the mass and density of a cometary nucleus. Typically, the nuclei are too small and their gravity too weak to affect the trajectory of the flyby spacecraft. The same was true for Tempel 1, but observations of the expanding dust cloud from the impact could be modeled so as to solve for the nucleus gravity. When combined with the volume of the nucleus as obtained from the camera images, it was shown that the Tempel 1 nucleus had a bulk density between 0.2 and 1.0 gram per cubic centimetre with a preferred value of 0.4 gram per cubic centimetre, less than half that of water ice. The measurement clearly confirmed ideas from telescopic research that comets were not very dense.

After the great success of Stardust and Deep Impact, NASA had additional plans for the spacecraft. Stardust was retargeted to go to Tempel 1 and image the crater from the Deep Impact explosion as well as more of the nucleus surface not seen on the first flyby. Deep Impact was retargeted to fly past 103P/Hartley 2, a small but very active comet.

Deep Impact, in its postimpact EPOXI mission, flew past Comet Hartley 2 on November 4, 2010. It imaged a small nucleus about 2.3 km (1.4 miles) in length and 0.9 km (0.6 mile) wide. As with Halley and Borrelly, the nucleus appeared to be two bodies stuck together, each having rough terrain but covered with very fine, smooth material at the neck where they came together. The most amazing result was that the smaller of the two bodies making up the nucleus was far more active than the larger one. The activity on the smaller body appeared to be driven by CO2 sublimationan unexpected result, given that short-period comets are expected to lose their near-surface CO2 early during their many passages close to the Sun. The other half of the nucleus was far less active and only showed evidence of water ice sublimation. The active half of the comet also appeared to be flinging baseball- to basketball-sized chunks of water ice into the coma, further enhancing the gas production from the comet as they sublimated away.

The EPOXI images also showed that the nucleus was not rotating smoothly but was in complex rotationa state where the comet nucleus rotates but the direction of the rotation pole precesses rapidly, drawing a large circle on the sky. Hartley 2 was the first encountered comet to exhibit complex rotation. It was likely driven by the very high activity from the smaller half of the nucleus, putting large torques on the nucleus rotation.

Stardust/NExT (New Exploration of Tempel 1) flew past Tempel 1 on February 14, 2011, and it imaged the spot where the Deep Impact daughter spacecraft had struck the nucleus. Some scientists believed that they saw evidence of a crater about 150 metres (500 feet) in diameter, but other scientists looked at the same images and saw no clear evidence of a crater. Some of the ambiguity was due to the fact that the Stardust camera was not as sharp as the Deep Impact cameras, and some of it was also due to the fact that sunlight was illuminating the nucleus from a different direction. The debate over whether there was a recognizable crater lingers on.

Among the new areas observed by Stardust-NeXT there was further evidence of geologic processes, including layered terrains. Using stereographic imaging, the scientists traced dust jets observed in the coma back to the nucleus surface, and they appeared to originate from some of the layered terrain. Again, the resolution of the images was not good enough to understand why the jets were coming from that area.

In 2004 ESA launched Rosetta (named after the Rosetta Stone, which had unlocked the secret of Egyptian hieroglyphics) on a trajectory to Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko (67P). Rendezvous with 67P took place on August 6, 2014. Along the way, Rosetta successfully flew by the asteroids 2849 Steins and 21 Lutetia and obtained considerable scientific data. Rosetta uses 11 scientific instruments to study the nucleus, coma, and solar wind interaction. Unlike previous comet missions, Rosetta will orbit the nucleus until December 2015, providing a complete view of the comet as activity begins, reaches a maximum at perihelion, and then wanes. Rosetta carried a spacecraft called Philae that landed on the nucleus surface on November 12, 2014. Philae drilled into the nucleus surface to collect samples of the nucleus and analyze them in situ. As the first mission to orbit and land on a cometary nucleus, Rosetta is expected to answer many questions about the sources of cometary activity.

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comet | Definition, Composition, & Facts | Britannica.com

In Depth | Comets Solar System Exploration: NASA Science

OverviewIn the distant past, people were both awed and alarmed by comets, perceiving them as long-haired stars that appeared in the sky unannounced and unpredictably. Chinese astronomers kept extensive records for centuries, including illustrations of characteristic types of comet tails, times of cometary appearances and disappearances, and celestial positions. These historic comet annals have proven to be a valuable resource for later astronomers.

We now know that comets are leftovers from the dawn of our solar system around 4.6 billion years ago, and consist mostly of ice coated with dark organic material. They have been referred to as "dirty snowballs." They may yield important clues about the formation of our solar system. Comets may have brought water and organic compounds, the building blocks of life, to the early Earth and other parts of the solar system.

Where Do Comets Come From?

As theorized by astronomer Gerard Kuiper in 1951, a disc-like belt of icy bodies exists beyond Neptune, where a population of dark comets orbits the Sun in the realm of Pluto. These icy objects, occasionally pushed by gravity into orbits bringing them closer to the Sun, become the so-called short-period comets. Taking less than 200 years to orbit the Sun, in many cases their appearance is predictable because they have passed by before. Less predictable are long-period comets, many of which arrive from a region called the Oort Cloud about 100,000 astronomical units (that is, about 100,000 times the distance between Earth and the Sun) from the Sun. These Oort Cloud comets can take as long as 30 million years to complete one trip around the Sun.

Each comet has a tiny frozen part, called a nucleus, often no larger than a few kilometers across. The nucleus contains icy chunks, frozen gases with bits of embedded dust. A comet warms up as it nears the Sun and develops an atmosphere, or coma. The Sun's heat causes the comet's ices to change to gases so the coma gets larger. The coma may extend hundreds of thousands of kilometers. The pressure of sunlight and high-speed solar particles (solar wind) can blow the coma dust and gas away from the Sun, sometimes forming a long, bright tail. Comets actually have two tailsa dust tail and an ion (gas) tail.

Most comets travel a safe distance from the Suncomet Halley comes no closer than 89 million kilometers (55 million miles). However, some comets, called sungrazers, crash straight into the Sun or get so close that they break up and evaporate.

Exploration of Comets

Scientists have long wanted to study comets in some detail, tantalized by the few 1986 images of comet Halley's nucleus. NASA's Deep Space 1 spacecraft flew by comet Borrelly in 2001 and photographed its nucleus, which is about 8 kilometers (5 miles) long.

NASA's Stardust mission successfully flew within 236 kilometers (147 miles) of the nucleus of Comet Wild 2 in January 2004, collecting cometary particles and interstellar dust for a sample return to Earth in 2006. The photographs taken during this close flyby of a comet nucleus show jets of dust and a rugged, textured surface. Analysis of the Stardust samples suggests that comets may be more complex than originally thought. Minerals formed near the Sun or other stars were found in the samples, suggesting that materials from the inner regions of the solar system traveled to the outer regions where comets formed.

Another NASA mission, Deep Impact, consisted of a flyby spacecraft and an impactor. In July 2005, the impactor was released into the path of the nucleus of comet Tempel 1 in a planned collision, which vaporized the impactor and ejected massive amounts of fine, powdery material from beneath the comet's surface. En route to impact, the impactor camera imaged the comet in increasing detail. Two cameras and a spectrometer on the flyby spacecraft recorded the dramatic excavation that helped determine the interior composition and structure of the nucleus.

After their successful primary missions, the Deep Impact spacecraft and the Stardust spacecraft were still healthy and were retargeted for additional cometary flybys. Deep Impact's mission, EPOXI (Extrasolar Planet Observation and Deep Impact Extended Investigation), comprised two projects: the Deep Impact Extended Investigation (DIXI), which encountered comet Hartley 2 in November 2010, and the Extrasolar Planet Observation and Characterization (EPOCh) investigation, which searched for Earth-size planets around other stars on route to Hartley 2. NASA returned to comet Tempel 1 in 2011, when the Stardust New Exploration of Tempel 1 (NExT) mission observed changes in the nucleus since Deep Impact's 2005 encounter.

How Comets Get Their Names

Comet naming can be complicated. Comets are generally named for their discoverereither a person or a spacecraft. This International Astronomical Union guideline was developed only in the last century. For example, comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 was so named because it was the ninth short-periodic comet discovered by Eugene and Carolyn Shoemaker and David Levy. Since spacecraft are very effective at spotting comets many comets have LINEAR, SOHO or WISE in their names.

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In Depth | Comets Solar System Exploration: NASA Science

Overview | Comets Solar System Exploration: NASA Science

Comets are cosmic snowballs of frozen gases, rock and dust that orbit the Sun. When frozen, they are the size of a small town. When a comet's orbit brings it close to the Sun, it heats up and spews dust and gases into a giant glowing head larger than most planets. The dust and gases form a tail that stretches away from the Sun for millions of miles. There are likely billions of comets orbiting our Sun in the Kuiper Belt and even more distant Oort Cloud.

The current number of known comets is:

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Kid-Friendly Comets

Kid-Friendly Comets

Comets orbit the Sun just like planets and asteroids do, except a comet usually has a very elongated orbit.

As the comet gets closer to the Sun, some of the ice starts to melt and boil off, along with particles of dust. These particles and gases make a cloud around the nucleus, called a coma.

The coma is lit by the Sun. The sunlight also pushes this material into the beautiful brightly lit tail of the comet.

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Overview | Comets Solar System Exploration: NASA Science

Comet Facts – Comets – Astronomy for Kids

Temperature is very irregular in outer space. The parts that are near stars are extremely hot! Think about Venus, the second closest planet to the Sun. It goes up to 462C. But the background temperature in space is about -270C super cold! Things can change states if temperatures change so much. They can go from solid, to liquid, to gas! This is actually the reason why comets have their tails!

The tail is one of the most distinctive features of a comet!

Comets may look small from a distance, but theyre actually gigantic!

See how the Kuiper belt is disc-shaped? The Oort Cloud is farther away, so gravity from the planets dont affect it as much. Thats why it envelopes the Solar System like a sphere or a cloud!

Where the comet moves in space is important for its shape! When comets are still in the far reaches of the Oort Cloud or the Kuiper Belt, theyre made up only of their nuclei. But everything changes once they move closer to the Sun! Remember a comet is mostly made out of ice.

And what happens to ice as it gets close to heat? It melts! In the case of comets, their nuclei start to sublimate, changing from ice to gas immediately. This is when the comet starts developing its other parts!

As the ice melts, the comet gains a coma. The coma is basically a giant cloud of dust and different gases that surrounds the nucleus. Comas are extremely big up to 600,000 miles across! The coma and the nucleus make up the head of the comet. A hydrogen cloud also develops around the comets head, but we cant see it with our eyes. Hydrogen clouds are even bigger than comas they can get as big as 10 Suns!

Heres an easyway to remember what a comets head is called. The coma looks kind of like the head of a comma without its tail!

The comets tail appears when it gets close to the Sun. The tail is probably the most special feature of comets!

Asteroids are not icy like comets. Instead, theyre made out of rock and metals

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Comet Facts - Comets - Astronomy for Kids