by bison » Wed Mar 31, 2010 10:35 pm
A good deal has happened with the P/2010 A2 (LINEAR) story since early February. For starters, the tail and the peculiar X-shaped pattern at its end have held their shape remarkably well, refusing to be scattered by the the force of the explosive collision supposed to have created them, or by the Solar wind. The tail, which was supposed to be driven away from the Sun, like that of a comet, has recently been photographed pointing almost directly AT the Sun. Dr. David Jewitt, who has now photographed the object several times with the Hubble Space Telescope has declined to release any of the images, beyond the first one. No explanation has been offered for why the debris of a collision should not be spherically distributed, how a narrow tail could have formed, why the supposed debris has not smeared out the complex structure it contains, or why the object's brightness has gone up, down, and up again, rendering it recently as bright as it was at the time of its discovery, over two and a half months ago. Ross
A good deal has happened with the P/2010 A2 (LINEAR) story since early February. For starters, the tail and the peculiar X-shaped pattern at its end have held their shape remarkably well, refusing to be scattered by the the force of the explosive collision supposed to have created them, or by the Solar wind. The tail, which was supposed to be driven away from the Sun, like that of a comet, has recently been photographed pointing almost directly AT the Sun. Dr. David Jewitt, who has now photographed the object several times with the Hubble Space Telescope has declined to release any of the images, beyond the first one. No explanation has been offered for why the debris of a collision should not be spherically distributed, how a narrow tail could have formed, why the supposed debris has not smeared out the complex structure it contains, or why the object's brightness has gone up, down, and up again, rendering it recently as bright as it was at the time of its discovery, over two and a half months ago. Ross