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Media Contact:
Barbara K. Kennedy
Penn State
science@psu.edu
814-863-4682
issued by Penn State
July 4, 2005 University Park, PA -- Scientists using the Swift satellite witnessed a tale of fire and ice today, as NASA's Deep Impact probe slammed into the frozen comet Tempel 1. The collision briefly lit the dim comet's surface and exposed, for the first time, a section of ancient and virgin material from the comet's interior.
Swift is providing the only simultaneous multi-wavelength observation of this rare event, with a suite of instruments capable of detecting optical light, ultraviolet, X-rays and gamma rays. Different wavelengths reveal different secrets about the comet.
So far, after a set of eight observations each lasting about 50
minutes, Swift scientists have seen a quick and dramatic rise in
ultraviolet light, evidence that the Deep Impact probe struck a hard
surface, as opposed to a softer, snowy surface. A movie of the
ultraviolet observations is available on the Web at
More observations and analysis are expected in the coming days from
teams at NASA and Penn State and in Italy and the United Kingdom.
"We have now observed this comet before, during, and after the
collision," said Dr. Sally Hunsberger of the Swift Mission Operation
Center at Penn State. "The comparison of observations at different
times -- that is, what was seen, when and at what wavelength --
should prove to be quite interesting."
Most of the debris observed in ultraviolet light likely came from
once-icy surface material heated to 2,000 degrees by the impact.
X-rays have not been detected yet but analysis will continue
throughout the week. X-rays are expected to be emitted from newly
liberated sub-surface material lifted into the comet's coma, which is
then illuminated by the high-energy solar wind from the Sun. It takes
about a day, however, for the material to reach the coma.
"Some called it fireworks today, but it really was more like
'iceworks,'" said Prof. Keith Mason, Director of Mullard Space
Science Laboratory at University College London, who organized the
Swift observations. "Much of the comet is ice. It's the other stuff
deep inside we're most interested in -- pristine material from the
formation of the solar system locked safely below the comet's frozen
surface. We don't know exactly what we kicked up yet."
Swift's "day job" is detecting distant, natural explosions called
gamma-ray bursts and creating a map of X-ray sources in the universe,
far more energetic "fireworks." Indeed, since beginning this Deep
Impact campaign on July 1 -- in addition to seeing comet Tempel 1 --
Swift has seen a gamma-ray burst and a supernova and has discovered a
black hole in the Milky Way galaxy. The satellite's speed and
agility, however, provides an important complement to the dozens of
other world-class observatories in space and on Earth observing the
Deep Impact experiment. Swift will continue to monitor the comet this
week.
Comets are small astronomical objects usually in highly elliptical
orbits around the sun. They are made primarily of frozen water,
methane and carbon dioxide with a small amount of minerals. They
likely originate in the Oort Cloud in the outskirts of the solar
system. Comet Tempel 1 is about the size of Washington, D.C. Some
scientists say that comets crashing into Earth billions of years ago
brought water to our planet.
A comet becomes visible when radiation from the Sun evaporates its
outer layers, creating a coma, the thin atmosphere. Solar wind
impacts the coma to form the comet's tail of dust and gas, which
always points away from the Sun. Comets are best visible when they
enter the inner solar system, closer to the Sun.
"The Deep Impact collision was the most watched astronomical event of
the year," said Dr. Neil Gehrels, Swift Principal Investigator at
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. "All the
'big-guns' observatories tracked it. In the next few days, as
material continues to fly off the comet from newly created vents, we
will see whether Swift can offer new insight into comets by virtue of
the high-energy light we are seeing."
Prof. Mason and Prof. Alan Wells of the University of Leicester in
England are at the Swift Mission Operation Center to help with the
observation.
The Deep Impact mission is managed by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
Pasadena, Calif. Swift is a medium-class NASA explorer mission in
partnership with the Italian Space Agency and the Particle Physics and
Astronomy Research Council in the United Kingdom, and is managed by NASA
Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. Penn
State controls science and flight operations from the Mission
Operations Center in University Park, Pennsylvania. The spacecraft
was built in collaboration with national laboratories, universities
and international partners, including Penn State University; Los
Alamos National Laboratory, New Mexico; Sonoma State University,
Rohnert Park, Calif.; Mullard Space Science Laboratory in Dorking,
Surrey, England; the University of Leicester, England; Brera
Observatory in Milan; and ASI Science Data Center in Frascati, Italy.
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