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Author Topic: The Space Program and DS9 again?
AndrewR
Resident Nut-cache
Member # 44

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OK we have the Deep Space Program... is this another DS9 homage?

read on:

Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS)

August 13, 1999

SDSS Discovers its First Comet

The Sloan Digital Sky Survey has found its first new comet, the latest
in a series of interesting treasures mined from the Survey's test-year
data.

Julianne Dalcanton, an SDSS astronomer from the University of
Washington, was sifting through test run data from March 20. She was
using a "fuzzy blob" search algorithm to find faint galaxies for her
research. But in addition to many fuzzy-looking galaxies, the algorithm
also yielded an elongated fuzzy blob with a bright splotch at one end.
In other words, Dalcanton had found a comet in the SDSS data. Along
with SDSS astronomers Steve Kent and Sadanori Okamura, Dalcanton
reported the discovery to the Central Bureau for Astronomical
Telegrams.

It turns out that Dalcanton's sighting wasn't actually the first
detection of this particular heavenly body. Near Earth Object (NEO)
surveys had observed the object several times, up to a year earlier.
Based on Dalcanton's report of the comet's position and motion, Gareth
Williams of the IAU Minor Planet Center located the object in the
LINEAR project database, and Gene Magnier of the University of
Washington produced another observation from the LONEOS survey.
However, the NEO surveys had merely classified the object as
"apparently asteroidal," not as an actual comet. Comet C/1999 F2 was
therefore officially named Comet Dalcanton, in recognition of her
correct identification.

The Sky Survey seems to be acquiring a reputation for finding unusual
and interesting objects during its ongoing test phase. The SDSS is
first and foremost a survey of distant galaxies and quasars in an
effort to map the large-scale structure of the universe, and it has
already distinguished itself in this arena by finding some of the most
distant quasars known. But in the process of surveying one-quarter of
the sky, the 2.5-meter SDSS telescope will also image millions of
objects in our own Milky Way galaxy. Many of these objects, such as the
recently discovered methane dwarfs, are interesting in their own right.

Comet Dalcanton is no exception to this trend of interesting finds. It
is one of only a few known comets that are thought to come from the
inner Oort Cloud, a collection of billions of cometary bodies around
our solar system that are thousands of times further from the sun than
Earth is. Comet Dalcanton also didn't make it especially far into our
solar system, compared to comets that we can see with the unaided eye.
It reached its perihelion (distance of closest approach to the sun)
just inside the orbit of Jupiter in August 1998, and is now on its way
back to the Oort Cloud. It will travel further away than almost all
other known periodic comets.

Despite not having come very close to the sun, Comet Dalcanton has an
especially prominent tail. Such comets beyond the inner solar system
often escape detection because they lack visible tails. Comet tails
form as the icy outer layers of the comet are vaporized by the sun and
then blown in the direction away from the sun by radiation pressure and
the solar wind. Each time a periodic comet comes back to perihelion,
the tail becomes weaker as less material is available to evaporate. So,
on the basis of Comet Dalcanton's significant tail, astronomers suspect
this is the comet's first foray near the sun.

This won't be Comet Dalcanton's last visit to our part of the solar
system, according to the SDSS and NEO surveys' data. But don't hold
your breath; the comet's round trip will take 186,000 years.

Images

Larger image containing comet http://www.sdss.org/news/features/19990813.comet.img1.html

Graph showing motion of comet http://www.sdss.org/news/features/19990813.comet.img2.html

Graph of known comet apohelia http://www.sdss.org/news/features/19990813.comet.img3.html

Related links

IAU Circular for Comet Dalcanton (with orbital elements) http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/iauc/07100/07194.html

The Kuiper Belt and the Oort Cloud http://seds.lpl.arizona.edu/nineplanets/nineplanets/kboc.html

Near Earth Object Program http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/

The NEO Page http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/iau/NEO/TheNEOPage.html

------------------
"All is full of love, all around you" - Bj�rk


Registered: Mar 1999  |  IP: Logged
Sol System
two dollar pistol
Member # 30

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I imagine it's probably named for some real Sloan guy, rather than a very recent fictional character.

Still, neat article!

------------------
"I am just a worthless liar. I am just an imbecile. I will only complicate you. Trust in me and fall as well."
--
Tool


Registered: Mar 1999  |  IP: Logged
Saltah'na
Chinese Canadian, or 75% Commie Bastard.
Member # 33

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I smell conspiracy..............

------------------
I can resist anything.......
Except Temptation


Registered: Mar 1999  |  IP: Logged
   

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