The Adventure
More than any comet before,
1999 S4 LINEAR has revealed its nature, its very insides and has given researchers
precious clues that reflect on a long, cold history. While
some of the details are speculative, the scientists who have studied LINEAR
helped SPACE.com put together this icy adventure.
This is the life of a comet:
Along the outskirts of a
single spiral arm of the Milky Way Galaxy, roughly 4.6 billion years ago, a
cloud of gas and dust began to gather and draw inward. The loose amalgam of
material began to rotate and the collective force of gravity forced a collapse.
A star, our Sun, was born.
The final days

This sequence of images shows the comet before and during its breakup,
which began in July 2000. The larger images have been enhanced to highlight
features. The bright triangle is an ion tale. A plume develops and goes
away, likely a jet of material rotating with the comet. The small inset
images are at the same scale as the larger images, but show just the inner
third of the view and are not enhanced. Click
to enlarge
|
Around the rotating Sun,
a dense fog of remaining debris swirled into an ever-flattening disk. Small
bits of ice and dust collected into frozen clumps. The scene was violent, collisions
rampant. Clumps sometimes stuck together and formed fluffy boulders.
Planets were created, and
one became a giant, with a rocky core and a gaseous exterior. It came to be
called Jupiter.
In the shadow of the giant,
other boulders roamed. Some were the size of football fields. They were brittle
-- less like rock really, more like Styrofoam -- and loaded with water ice but
overloaded with dust.
Some of these primordial
boulders met up with others, and sometimes their frozen, sticky exteriors joined.
In time, a group of 16 or more had become a single object, some 2,500 to 3,300
feet (750 to 1,000 meters) across and carrying about 3.6 million tons (3.3 billion
kilograms) of water.
This newly formed comet
had many cousins, all under the influence of Jupiter's mighty gravity. Many
were destined to die soon, flung like rocks from a slingshot toward the Sun.
On the way, a handful hit a small rocky planet, third from the Sun, bringing
precious water and organic chemicals to an otherwise barren world. Others were
slung outward, beyond the reach of the new Sun's gravity into interstellar space.
Lost forever.
But this one comet lived
on. It was cast outward, but it managed to join up with a cast of other comets
inhabiting a vast but sparsely populated halo of comets surrounding the Sun
that reached a fifth of the way to the next nearest star. It was a place called
the Oort Cloud.
A new path had been set
for the comet, a distant orbit that might or might not allow a return to the
inner solar system.
Then, billions of years
later, something jostled the comet's trajectory -- possibly the gravity of a
passing star. A new course was set, back toward the Sun.
The comet returned, zooming
ever more quickly on a course that would take it around the Sun and then send
it back out to the Oort Cloud. But something was wrong. The Sun's energy was
converting the comet's ice directly into gas, bypassing the liquid phase entirely.
Sublimation, it was called. It had happened to other comets and they had dealt
with it by simply giving up a little of their exteriors.
But as the precious ice
burned off into a glowing halo around this comet, the original boulders began
to loosen. First one broke off, then another, releasing vast amounts of ice
that had not seen space for 4.6 billion years. Over a period of a few days,
the whole comet was in pieces.
The original boulders continued
on, mini-comets in their own right.
These primordial building
blocks of a once-large comet now travel amidst a sea of their own destruction
-- as bits no larger than sand grains and pebbles -- or even as boulders the
size of a bus.
Just as it has gathered
itself together, this comet has come undone.
Next
page: New
Model of Comet Formation