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Comet Holmes —"Once in a Lifetime"
By John P. Pratt
This week you can see an amazing, bright
comet that baffles astronomers.
Comet Holmes, which is totally puzzling to astronomers, is currently
visible to the unaided eye. Sky and Telescope opens their
article saying, "Amateur astronomers the world over have been
stunned and amazed by the weirdest new object to appear in the sky
in memory."[1]
The appearance of Comet Holmes has
the potential to cause comet theory to be rewritten. And you can
see it even from most cities. A short drive from the city to darker
skies might be worth the trip. Fortunately the moon will not be
in the sky for the next week during which the comet should remain
visible in the northeast sky after sunset.
There are now plenty of pictures of
it on the internet.
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Look in the sword-wielding
bicep of Perseus. |
The comet is now found in the mighty
bicep of Perseus, in the right arm, which wields his sword. He is
the constellation representing the Returning Bridegroom Hero (the
Savior) who marries the beautiful Chained Princess, Andromeda (His
Church).[2]
We should be watching for astronomical
signs of the times, and perhaps keep in mind that the Prophet Joseph
Smith said that when the sign of the coming of the Son of Man will
be given, that the world "will say it is a planet, a comet,
etc."[3]
I do not believe that this comet is that sign, but I do believe
we should be watching and preparing.
Standard comet theory is the "dirty
iceberg" model, which claims that comets are conglomerations
of rock and ice that orbit the sun. They are supposed to be extremely
small, only a few miles across.
The theory is that when they get near
the sun, some of the ice evaporates, forming both gas and dust tails
which both point away from the sun, being blown that direction by
particles emanating from the sun. This tail can be millions of miles
long and can stream across the sky. Thus, the tail is extremely
tenuous. This is all supposed to happen in a very orderly manner,
with the comet gradually getting brighter as it approaches the sun
in its orbit, and then gradually dimming.
But Comet Holmes breaks most of those
rules. It is not a new comet, but was discovered in 1892. It has
a period of 6.9 years and is at a distance of about twice as far
from the sun as is the earth. That puts it in the asteroid belt
between Mars and Jupiter.
Most comets are only bright when they
are much nearer to the sun, and most come from beyond the distant
planet Pluto. This comet is normally so dim it couldn't even be
found at all from 1906 to 1964.[4]
It would probably be considered to be an asteroid (which are huge
chunks of rock) except for the fact that the year it was discovered
it looked like a comet when it flared up in a somewhat less dramatic
but similar event as is now occurring.
On Oct 24, 2007, it rocketed up in
brightness by almost a factor of 1,000,000 in one day! Astronomers
use "magnitude" to describe the brightness of stars. The
brightest are called first magnitude, and those in the Big Dipper
are called second magnitude, being a little dimmer. Five magnitudes
is a factor of 100 in brightness. Comet Holmes went from 17th magnitude
to nearly 2nd magnitude in 24 hours. Fifteen magnitudes is an increase
of 100 x 100 x 100 = 1,000,000 times brighter. And it is now a huge
spherical glowing ball of what appears to be mostly dust. Almost
certainly something exploded.
One astronomer said, "It is as
if the earth blew off its crust" which he estimated to be about
1% of the total comet mass. He also referred to viewing this comet
as a "once in a lifetime" experience.[5]
The size of the visible "coma,"
the bright luminescent ball around the head of a comet, is huge.
On Sunday, 4 Nov 2007, it appeared in my 10-inch mirror telescope
to be about 10 minutes of arc in diameter, which is a third of the
diameter of the full moon.
One article reported that it is now
more than twice as far from the earth as is the sun.[6]
Appearing to be that size at that distance means that the visible
sphere is now more than half a million miles in diameter![7]
That is quite an increase over the estimate of two miles for the
rock/ice head. Starting with a 2-mile diameter rock which ejected
1% of its mass, that would mean that the dust ball now reflecting
all that sunlight to us has a density of less than one 2,000th of
an ounce per cubic mile. That would be amazing indeed.
To me it appears that this comet —
and perhaps most comets — is much larger than previously thought.
Comet Holmes is in the asteroid belt area, and would almost certainly
be called an asteroid it if hadn't also flared up in a similar way
in 1892, allowing its discovery as a comet. Asteroids are known
to be much larger than comets. Ceres, the largest, rivals our Moon
in size.
The real question for comets is to
explain exactly where their brightness comes from as they approach
the sun, and in this case, to explain how comet-like explosions
of such magnitude could occur when the comet is so far from the
sun. There is still much to be understood in classical astronomy.
Something inside this supposedly dead dirty iceberg exploded in
an amazing fashion.
This discovery seems to blur the distinction
between asteroids and comets. It appears that asteroids may not
all be as dead as we had thought.
You can most likely see the comet for
at least another week. There is a good map of where to find it in
a Sky and Telescope article.[8]
Don't miss this opportunity to see a truly marvelous wonder of God.
Notes
- See www.skyandtelescope.com/observing/home/10775326.html.
- www.space.com/spacewatch/071026-comet-holmes-update.html.
- news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/7070108.stm.
- www.newsleader.com/apps/
pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071104/LIFESTYLE/711040301/1024
- The diameter is
estimated as 200,000,000 miles x sin (10') = 580,000 miles.
- www.skyandtelescope.com/observing/home/10862521.html.
- As pointed out in
my "Enoch's
Constellations Testify of Christ," Meridian Magazine
(23Aug 2006), Perseus represents the Savior, who is the returning
Hero who marries his Church, represented by the Princess Andromeda.
- Teachings of
the Prophet Joseph Smith, p. 287.
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