by aristarchusinexile » Wed Feb 11, 2009 6:33 pm
neufer wrote:Chris Peterson wrote:aristarchusinexile wrote:I wonder if it's possible for a comet to have two nuclei which 'orbit' each other .. or tumble together, presenting different faces. Any instances of this? If so, this comet could be one of those.
Certainly possible- asteroids like this are known, and in many respects, there is little difference between asteroids and comets. But I don't see anything in the images to suggest that Lulin has anything other than a normal, single-body nucleus. It is compact and point-like in images, and there is no cyclical variability in brightness with time.
The escape of cometary gases between the two halves might force cometary nuclei apart.
Chris, if you could lend me that telescope of yours, teach me how to point it, do photographs, etc. ... wait .. I'm going canoe tripping soon.
[quote="neufer"][quote="Chris Peterson"][quote="aristarchusinexile"]I wonder if it's possible for a comet to have two nuclei which 'orbit' each other .. or tumble together, presenting different faces. Any instances of this? If so, this comet could be one of those.[/quote]
Certainly possible- asteroids like this are known, and in many respects, there is little difference between asteroids and comets. But I don't see anything in the images to suggest that Lulin has anything other than a normal, single-body nucleus. It is compact and point-like in images, and there is no cyclical variability in brightness with time.[/quote]
The escape of cometary gases between the two halves might force cometary nuclei apart.[/quote]
Chris, if you could lend me that telescope of yours, teach me how to point it, do photographs, etc. ... wait .. I'm going canoe tripping soon.