News on Comets
- Comet Elenin is no more!
- Sea-water in comets!
- This Autumns celestial show: Comet Elenin
- Warning of a future cometary impact?
- SOHO watches a comet fade away
- Comet Hartley2 leaves a bumpy tail
- Comet Hartley is a hyperactive little comet
- Discovery of new comet that may be from interstellar space
- New insigth on comets
- Liqiud water on comets
- The sound of a passage through a comet -nucleus
- Closeup images of man-made crater on comet Tempel1
- Images from the Stardust-Tempel1 rendevouz downloadet
- First images from comet Tempel1 receiwed
- StardustNext a few hours from comet Tempel1
- Rendevouz with a comet monday
- WISE completes scan for asteroids and comets
- Stardust-NExT comet-hunter spots its target
- 2000 comets discovered by Solar observatory
- A comets atmosphere
- Spacecraft adjust course for another comet rendevouz
- Snowstorm from comet Hartley2
- Carbon dioxide - not water - fules comet jets
- Comet Hartley2s nucleus from EPOXI
- Space-radar images of comet Hartley2
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Cometary impact on Neptune
Monday, 19 July 2010 22:05
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| Solar system - Comets |
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When the comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 hit Jupiter sixteen years ago, scientists all over the world were prepared: instruments on board the space probes Voyager 2, Galileo and Ulysses documented every detail of this rare incident. Today, this data helps scientists detect cometary impacts that happened many, many years ago. The "dusty snowballs" leave traces in the atmosphere of the gas giants: water, carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, hydrocyanic acid, and carbon sulfide. These molecules can be detected in the radiation the planet radiates into space. Therefore, a gap in the barrier of the tropopause seems to be responsible for the elevated concentration of methane on Neptune. With -213oC, at Neptune’s southern Pole this air layer is six degrees warmer than everywhere else allowing gas to pass more easily from troposphere to stratosphere. The methane, which scientists believe originates from the planet itself, can therefore spread throughout the stratosphere. Source: Max Planck Institute |




A comet may have hit the planet Neptune about two centuries ago. This is indicated by the distribution of carbon monoxide in the atmosphere of the gas giant that researchers have now studied. The scientists analyzed data taken by the research satellite Herschel, that has been orbiting the Sun since May 2009.