I have been saying for
over seven years that the proper explanation for the unique
characteristics of a comet is carbon dust. It naturally charges up
and forms a tail as it approaches the sun. Any other explanation
esentially fails on that point. For that reason I had to see a black
covered object for this conjecture to stand at all.
Thus we can claim a
bullseye. We predicted just this. As well when the huge comet
impacted Earth around 12900 BP it filled the atmosphere with carbon
dust which acts as a marker for the Pleistocene nonconformity.
It is always wonderful
when all the evidence falls into place and the obvious predictions
arrive as well. Then you know that you got it right.
Sept.
5, 2014: A
NASA instrument aboard the European Space Agency’s (ESA's) Rosetta
orbiter has successfully made its first delivery of science data from
comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko.
The
instrument, named Alice, began mapping the comet’s surface last
month, recording the first far-ultraviolet light spectra of the
comet’s surface. From the data, the Alice team discovered the comet
is unusually dark -- darker than charcoal-black -- when viewed in
ultraviolet wavelengths. Alice also detected both hydrogen and
oxygen in the comet’s coma, or atmosphere.
Rosetta
scientists also discovered the comet’s surface so far shows no
large water-ice patches. The team expected to see ice patches on the
comet’s surface because it is too far away for the sun’s warmth
to turn its water into vapor.
"We’re
a bit surprised at just how unreflective the comet’s surface is and
how little evidence of exposed water-ice it shows," said Alan
Stern, Alice principal investigator at the Southwest Research
Institute in Boulder, Colorado.
Alice
is probing the origin, composition and workings of comet
67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, to gather sensitive, high-resolution
insights that cannot be obtained by either ground-based or
Earth-orbiting observation. It has more than 1,000 times the
data-gathering capability of instruments flown a generation ago, yet
it weighs less than nine pounds (four kilograms) and draws just four
watts of power. The instrument is one of two full instruments on
board Rosetta that are funded by NASA. The agency also provided
portions of two other instrument suites.
Other
U.S. contributions aboard the spacecraft are the Microwave Instrument
for Rosetta Orbiter (MIRO), the Ion and Electron Sensor (IES), part
of the Rosetta Plasma Consortium Suite, and the Double Focusing Mass
Spectrometer (DFMS) electronics package for the Rosetta Orbiter
Spectrometer for Ion Neutral Analysis (ROSINA). They are part of a
suite of 11 total science instruments aboard Rosetta.
MIRO
is designed to provide data on how gas and dust leave the surface of
the nucleus to form the coma and tail that gives comets their
intrinsic beauty. IES is part of a suite of five instruments to
analyze the plasma environment of the comet, particularly the coma.
To
obtain the orbital velocity necessary to reach its comet target, the
Rosetta spacecraft took advantage of four gravity assists (three from
Earth, one from Mars) and an almost three-year period of deep space
hibernation, waking up in January 2014 in time to prepare for its
rendezvous with 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko.
Rosetta
also carries a lander, Philae, which will drop to the comet’s
surface in November 2014.
The
comet observations will help scientists learn more about the origin
and evolution of our solar system and the role comets may have played
in providing Earth with water, and perhaps even life.
Credits:
More
information:
Rosetta
is an ESA mission with contributions from its member states and NASA.
Rosetta's Philae lander is provided by a consortium led by the German
Aerospace Center in Cologne; Max Planck Institute for Solar System
Research in Göttingen; French National Space Agency in Paris; and
the Italian Space Agency in Rome.
NASA’s
Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California, manages the
U.S. contribution to the Rosetta mission for the agency’s Science
Mission Directorate in Washington. JPL also built the MIRO instrument
and hosts its principal investigator, Samuel Gulkis. The Southwest
Research Institute, located in San Antonio and Boulder, developed
Rosetta’s IES and Alice instruments and hosts their principal
investigators, James Burch (IES) and Alan Stern (Alice).
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