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Comets are believed to be very
old objects that formed far out in the solar system. They contain ices and
dust PARTICLES which, at least in those comets that have never come near
to the Sun, must have remained unchanged since the formation of the solar
system.
It is therefore of great interest to explore the comets, not only to learn
more about the behaviour of the individual objects, but also to study the
materials of which they consist in order to learn more about the processes
that took place when our solar system was formed. Moreover, since the
observations of Comet Halley in 1985-86, it is known that comets contain
carbon-rich (organic) materials. Such studies have thus taken on a new
dimension in connection with the search for the building blocks of life.
It has even been suggested that comets may possibly carry (fossil)
bacteria.
Although some of the cosmic dust particles that are picked up in the
stratosphere by high-flying aircraft undoubtedly come from comets, the
best way to study cometary material is obviously to send dedicated
spacecraft to them in order to perform in-situ (on-the-spot) analysis.
Soon after, in early March 1986, an armada of no less than five
spacecraft visited Comet Halley, the most famous of all comets. It has
been observed by astronomers during more than 2000 years and moves around
the Sun in an elliptical orbit with a period of about 76 years. The most
detailed investigation, in particular of its "dirty snowball" nucleus, was
carried out by ESA's Giotto
spacecraft, which flew by it at an altitude of about 600 km.
American missions to comets are also underway. The NASA
Stardust spacecraft is now en route to
Comet Wild 2. While flying through its coma in January 2004, it will
capture a few micrograms of cometary dust and bring them back to Earth for
detailed laboratory
analysis two years later.
The NASA Deep Impact mission plans to
create a gigantic fireworks display on the 4th of July 2005. It will impact about
350 kg of copper on the nucleus of comet Tempel 1 at high speed - this
will make a big hole in the comet and will release a lot of freshly
exposed cometary material. It is then the intention to perform a detailed
analysis of the chemical composition of this material.
All these missions will provide a fantastic wealth of new data within the
next 15 years. They will give young astronomers, physicists and chemists a
great chance to analyse very primitive cosmic material and, who knows,
perhaps to find some of the missing links in our understanding of the
formation of planet Earth. Most of all, however, it is hoped that they
will also detect some of the building blocks of Life in the solar system.
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Life in the Universe
Exploring the Solar System
Missions to Comets
The Giotto Mission to Comet Halley
The Rosetta Mission to Comet Wirtanen
Other Missions (Section to be added soon)
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Last updated August 1, 2001