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NASA's Hubble Unexpectedly Catches Comet Breaking Up

著者: BeauHD
2026年3月21日 20:00

🤖 AI Summary

NASAのハブラー宇宙望遠鏡は、彗星C/2025 K1 (ATLAS)が初めて解体を始めた直後に予期せぬ早期段階での解体を捉えることに成功しました。この現象はコニファイン(Auburn Universityの物理学科教授)により報告され、「最高の科学は偶然から生まれる」とのことです。

コニファインは、観測が始まった翌日にこれらの画像を見た際に、撮影時に提案していた1つの彗星が4つに分断されていることに気づきました。ハブラーは、氷核周囲を包むガスと塵で構成されるcoma(彗発散)を持つ少なくとも4つの片鱗を捉えました。しかし、地上からの観測では、それらはわずかに見分けがつかない明るいボルブだけでした。

コニファインによると、「ハブラーが実際に解体した寸時にこのような現象を捉えることはこれまで例がありません。通常は数週間から1ヶ月後にしか見られませんが、今回は実際の解体から数日後です」とのことです。これは彗星表面で何が起こっているかについての重要な物理的過程を示唆しています。

これらの結果は、「イカルス」誌に発表されています。
NASA's Hubble Space Telescope unexpectedly captured a rare, early-stage breakup of comet C/2025 K1 (ATLAS) just days after it first began disintegrating. Phys.org reports: "Sometimes the best science happens by accident," said co-investigator John Noonan, a research professor in the Department of Physics at Auburn University in Alabama. "This comet got observed because our original comet was not viewable due to some new technical constraints after we won our proposal. We had to find a new target -- and right when we observed it, it happened to break apart, which is the slimmest of slim chances." Noonan didn't know K1 was fragmenting until he viewed the images the day after Hubble took them. "While I was taking an initial look at the data, I saw that there were four comets in those images when we only proposed to look at one," said Noonan. "So we knew this was something really, really special." Hubble caught K1 fragmenting into at least four pieces, each with a distinct coma, the fuzzy envelope of gas and dust that surrounds a comet's icy nucleus. Hubble cleanly resolved the fragments, but to ground-based telescopes, at the time they only appeared as barely distinguishable, bright blobs. [...] "Never before has Hubble caught a fragmenting comet this close to when it actually fell apart. Most of the time, it's a few weeks to a month later. And in this case, we were able to see it just days after," said Noonan. "This is telling us something very important about the physics of what's happening at the comet's surface. We may be seeing the timescale it takes to form a substantial dust layer that can then be ejected by the gas." The findings have been published in the journal Icarus.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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