Last week,
the ESA/NASA Solar and Heliospheric Observatory shattered its
own record for comet discoveries when astronomers announced that
the orbiting spacecraft had recorded its 200th sungrazing comet.
Michael Oates, an amateur astronomer in Britain, spotted SOHO-200
in an online image captured by one of SOHO's coronagraphs. The
picture showed the comet evaporating as it plunged through the
superheated solar corona.
"With
200 discoveries, SOHO is way ahead [of any other comet hunter],"
says Brian Marsden of Harvard University's Minor Planet Center.
The automated asteroid and comet search program "LINEAR is
a distant second with 50 comets. Among individuals, Carolyn Shoemaker
is of course the leader, with 30-something discoveries."
Right:
The SOHO C2 coronagraph captured this image of a sungrazing comet
0.9 degrees from the Sun on April 29, 2000. The solid brick-colored
disk in the middle is the coronagraph's occulting disk; the light
red graphic circle shows the true size of the Sun.
SOHO's primary
mission is to investigate the solar interior, the solar atmosphere,
and the solar wind. Space weather forecasters rely on the satellite,
which enjoys an uninterrupted 24-hour-a-day view of the Sun, for
advance warning of solar eruptions and geomagnetic storms. The
comets are a bonus.
"No one
expected to find all these comets when we launched SOHO nearly
5 years ago," says Doug Biesecker, a solar physicist at the
Goddard Space Flight Center. "They came as a huge surprise,
there's no doubt about it."
Only comets
that pass perilously close to the Sun catch SOHO's attention.
The vast majority, like SOHO-200, don't survive the encounter.
They swoop so low over the blazing solar photosphere that their
icy cores vaporize completely. Most of SOHO's 200 comets no longer
exist -- they disintegrated hours after they were discovered!
The key(s)
to spotting comets so close to the Sun are SOHO's extraordinary
coronagraphs. A coronagraph is a device that blocks out the Sun's
blinding glare with an occulting disk so that the faint corona
is visible, as well as surrounding stars and planets. Coronagraph
images at the SOHO web site are updated every 30 minutes or so.
About once each week the photos include a faint comet that anyone
can discover if they happen to be the first to look.
 
Above: In the left image Comet Hyakutake passes grandly
through the SOHO C3 coronagraph's field of view at the beginning
of May 1996. A more typical, sungrazing comet appears in the right
image. The faint fragment was discovered by amateur astronomer
Kazimieris Cernis of Vilnius, Lithuania, on 4 February. It marked
SOHO's 100th comet discovery. (Editor's Note: Although SOHO-100
came close to the Sun, and thus qualifies as a "sungrazer,"
it was not a Kreutz sungrazer as described in the text. SOHO-100
did not share the same orbit as that family of comets possibly
resulting from the breakup of a giant comet 2,000+ years ago.)
Remarkably,
most sungrazing comets appear to be fragments of a single giant
comet that broke apart near perihelion (closest approach to the
Sun) long ago. Marsden speculates that the parent might have been
a bright comet seen by the Greek astronomer Ephorus in 372 BC.
Ephorus reported that the comet split in two. Splits may have
occurred again and again, producing the Kreutz sungrazer family
(named after the nineteenth-century German astronomer who studied
them in some detail). The sungrazers share an elliptical orbit
that brings some of the fragments less than 50,000 km from the
Sun.
"The
association of the Ephorus comet with the 'original' break-up
is speculative," cautions Marsden. "Some may argue that
the breakup took place much longer ago, while others might say
that it happened in a somewhat different manner and quite a bit
more recently. We really don't know much about what happened."
The nucleus
of the original comet may have been as wide as 100 km, or 10 to
20 times larger than an ordinary comet. Most of the short-lived
fragments seen nowadays by SOHO are tiny -- probably no more than
a few tens of meters across. Occasionally, pieces come along that
are large enough to survive the Sun's searing heat, and these
can emerge from their close encounter as bright naked-eye comets.
One such fragment in 1965, Comet Ikeya-Seki, was visible in broad
daylight. Scientists estimate that Ikeya-Seki's icy nucleus was
some kilometers wide.
"In the
old days we thought these comets were a rarity because there were
only a few like Ikeya-Seki visible from the ground," continued
Marsden. "The smaller fragments are tremendously faint except
for a few days before perihelion. By the time SOHO spots them
they are in their death-throes."
Left:
In August 2000 NASA's Hubble Space Telescope spotted fragments
from the breakup of Comet LINEAR. A similar disruption of Ephorus's
comet 2,000 years ago may have created the existing family of
sungrazing comets seen by SOHO today.
SOHO's impressive
spate of comet finds can be attributed in large part to the efforts
of amateur astronomers. SOHO data are freely available to anyone
with an internet connection and a computer. Both realtime and
archival images are accessible at the SOHO web site, a popular
destination for comet hunters.
"In late
February, just after we announced our 100th comet, I mentioned
in an email message to (amateur astronomer) Michael Oates that
there might be undiscovered comets in images from our C2 coronagraph,"
says Biesecker. SOHO carries two coronagraphs. The C2 instrument
monitors the corona from 2.5 to 6 solar radii from the center
of the visible Sun. Its sister coronagraph, called "C3,"
has a wider field of view. It monitors activity at distances of
4 to 30 solar radii.
"Before
this summer, most of SOHO's comets had been found in C3 images,"
said Biesecker. "We really didn't expect to find many in
C2, because by the time the comets are close enough to the Sun
to fall within C2's narrow field of view they are moving very
quickly. We only record coronagraph images every half hour, so
it's easy to miss fast-moving comets in the C2 data."
Nevertheless,
Biesecker's February communique to Oates was the beginning of
an avalanche. Nearly, two-thirds of the comets discovered since
then were located by amateurs examining archived C2 images. SOHO-200
was found by Oates in a picture from April 1997.
"It turns
out that C2 is a better instrument than C3 for finding comets
during the months of May through July each year," explained
Biesecker. "Sungrazing comets seem to reach a peak brightness
at a certain distance from the Sun, between 10 and 12 solar radii.
When we see a comet in a coronagraph image, we're not seeing its
true distance from the Sun. What we see is its distance projected
onto the flat plane of the image. In the May to July time frame
the projected distance corresponding to 10-12 solar radii falls
within the C3 instrument's vignetting. But, they show up nicely
in C2 images. At that time of the year the comets appear to move
more slowly, too, so we get a few additional images of the comet."
All these factors have combined to make amateur searches through
the archives so productive.
"Amateurs
have even taken the lead on realtime discoveries," added
Biesecker. "If a comet zooms through the coronagraph's field
of view at 2 a.m. here at Goddard, someone in Europe is probably
looking at the web site while we're asleep!"

Above: This 4-minute exposure of sungrazing comet Ikeya-Seki
was captured by Roger Lynds at Kitt Peak, Arizona, on the morning
of 1965 October 29. Unlike most of the sungrazing comets recorded
by SOHO, Ikeya-Seki survived its close encounter with the Sun
to become a bright naked-eye object.Copyright© Roger Lynds,
all rights reserved.
By convention,
comets discovered in SOHO data are named after the spacecraft
rather than the astronomer. Nevertheless, say amateur comet hunters,
being the first to spot a comet streaking past the Sun can be
a real thrill.
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