ALTERNATIVE NEWS

Blacklisted News
Cryptogon
Raw Story
Rense


TALK RADIO

Axiom Radio
Mike Chambers Live
Oracle Broadcasting
The Global Reality
Vantage Point Radio
Become Vocal Local


BLOGS

Freeman
The Celtic Rebel
Techno Fascism Blog
Washingtons's Blog


Business/Economics

321 Gold
JSMineset
Kitco
Seeking Alpha
Market Watch
Bloomberg
Wall Street Journal
RTT News
CNN Money
Forbes
Business Week
Shadow Stats
Economist
Financial Times
Fortune Magazine
Kitco
Gold Eagle
Zero Hedge
The Daily Reckoning


Science/Technology

Wired
Blast Magazine
PHYSorg
Science Daily
Popular Science
Engadget
New Scientist
Technovelgy
Singularity Hub
H+ Magazine
Science Magazine
Seed Magazine
CBR Online
Science News
SlashDot
Scientific American
Spectrum IEEE
Technology Review
io9
ZD Net
Technology News
The Register
Tech News World
VNU Net

LEE'S PODCAST/ARCHIVE

SUBSCRIBE TO RSS

FOLLOW ME ON TWITTER

LEE'S MYSPACE PAGE










 Prev    Next

Comet's dramatic death dive into the sun
Published on 03-21-2010   Email To Friend    Print Version

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Source: Times Online

A space telescope has caught a giant comet's extraordinary final hours as it made a dive of death into the sun.

The cosmic missile, with a head the size of the Isle of Wight and a tail many millions of miles long, appeared in pictures being taken by a NASA satellite on Friday (12th).

The orbiting SoHo observatory, which continually monitors the sun, recorded the rare and previously unspotted brilliant comet swooping in from the lower left of its pictures.

It grew ever brighter as it aimed directly at our home star, shown as a white ring in the images. It was immediately vaporised by the sun's powerful nuclear furnace.

Experts believe the huge comet was just a fragment of a vast supercomet that broke up at least 2,000 years ago. The resulting debris, now orbiting in the solar system as smaller comets, is called the Kreutz family after a 19th century German astronomer who studied them.

Astronomers say that many much smaller Kreutz fragments, too small to be seen, graze past the sun every day and disintegrate.

This week NASA revealed that their new Wide-Field Infrared Survey Explorer space telescope - WISE - could detect a dim brown dwarf companion star to the sun that may be sending comets towards us from a vast reservoir of the icy objects called the Oort Cloud at the edge of the solar system.

Robin Scagell, vice-president of the Society for Popular Astronomy, said today: "A comet like this will be like no more than an annoying fleabite for the sun. But if it something of a similar size hit the Earth it could blast a crater the size of a city and cause country-wide devastation. So it is rather alarming that they just arrive out of nowhere and are so unpredictable!"


oracle broadcasting