Caterpillar Comet Poses for Pictures En Route to Mars

Comet
C/2013 A1 Siding Spring wriggles between the globular clusters NGC 362
(upper left) and 47 Tucanae (NGC 104) while skirting the edge of the
Small Magellanic Cloud on August 29, 2014. Credit: Rolando Ligustri
Now that’s pure gorgeous. As Comet C/2013 A1 Siding Spring sidles towards its
October 19th encounter with Mars, it’s
passing a trio of sumptuous deep sky objects near the south celestial
pole this week. Astrophotographers weren’t going to let the comet’s
picturesque alignments pass without notice.
Rolando Ligustri captured this remarkable view using a remote,
computer-controlled telescope on August 29th. It shows the rich
assemblage of stars and star clusters that comprise the
Small Magellanic Cloud, one of the Milky Way’s satellite galaxies located 200,000 light years away.

A photo taken one day earlier on August 28th captures the comet and NGC 362 in close embrace. Credit: Damian Peach
Looking like a fuzzy caterpillar, Siding Spring seems to
crawl between the little globular cluster NGC 362 and the rich swarm
called
47 Tucanae,
one of the few globulars bright enough to see with the naked eye.
C/2013 A1 is currently circumpolar from many locations south of the
equator and visible all night long. Glowing at around magnitude +9.5
with a small coma and brighter nucleus, a 6-inch or larger telescope
will coax it from a dark sky. Siding Spring dips farthest south on
September 2-3 (Dec. -74ยบ) and then zooms northward for Scorpius and
Sagittarius. It will encounter additional deep sky objects along the
way, most notably the bright open cluster M7 on October 5-6, before
passing some 82,000 miles from Mars on October 19th.

Map
showing Comet Siding Spring’s recent and upcoming travels near the
Small Magellanic Cloud. Positions are shown nightly for Alice Springs,
Australia. Source: Chris Marriott’s SkyMap
While the chance of a Mars impact is near zero, the fluffy comet’s
fluffy coma and broad tail, both replete with tiny but fast-moving
(~125,000 mph) dust particles,
might pose a hazard
for spacecraft orbiting the Red Planet. Assuming either coma or tail
grows broad enough to sweep across the Martian atmosphere, impacting
dust might create a spectacular meteor shower. Mars
Rover cameras may be used to photograph the comet before the flyby and to capture meteors during its closest approach. NASA
plans to ‘hide’ its orbiting probes on the opposite side of the planet
for a brief time during the approximately 4-hour-long encounter just in
case.
Today, Siding Spring’s coma or temporary atmosphere measures about
12,000 miles (19,300 km) wide. While I can’t get my hands on current
dust production rates, in late January, when it was farther from the sun
than at present, C/2013 A1 kicked out
~800,000 lbs per hour (~100 kg/sec).
On October 19th, observers across much of the globe with 6-inch or
larger instruments will witness the historic encounter with their own
eyes at dusk in the constellation Sagittarius.
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