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| The volatile nucleus of the comet Tempel 1 blows off a stream of dust that was captured in these transition sequence images by the Hubble Space Telescope, scientists said June 27, 2005. The dust jet could be a preview of what astronomers see on July 4, when NASA's Deep Impact space probe is set to collide with the comet, giving the first glimpse inside the heart of a comet, the scientists said in a statement. (Photo: Yahoo) | WASHINGTON, June 27 (Xinhuanet) -- The Hubble Space Telescope has captured the image of an outburst of dust from the volatile and icy nucleus of comet Temple 1, giving a preview of what it might be seen on July 4 when a NASA probe is set to strike the comet, scientists
said Monday.
One of the images snapped on June 14 by the orbiting
observatory from 120 million km away reveals the dust jet extended about 2,200
km pointing in the direction of sun. Scientists said Hubble's views complement
close-up images being taken by cameras carried by Deep Impact, which is speeding
toward the comet.
NASA's Deep Impact space probe is set to collide with
the comet. Scientists said the collision could create a similar dust plume.
Comets frequently show outbursts in activity, but
astronomers do not know why. Temple 1 is moving closer to the sun, it might be
because the increased heat opened up a crack in the comet's crustysurface,
enabling trapped dust and gas to spew out.
It is also possible that part of the comet's crust
was lifted off the nucleus by the pressure of heated gases beneath the surface,
and the crust might then crumble into small dust particles, producing a
fan-shaped coma.
Astronomers hope the July 4 collision will unleash
more primordial material trapped inside the comet, which formed billions of
years ago.
Comets are thought to be "dirty snowballs", porous
agglomerates of ice and rock that dwell in the frigid outer boundaries of our
solar system. Enditem |