Comet Halley's Nucleus: An Orbiting Iceberg
What does a comet nucleus look like?
Formed from the
primordial stuff of the Solar System, comet nuclei were
thought to resemble very dirty icebergs.
But ground-based
telescopes revealed only the surrounding
cloud of gas and dust of active comets nearing the Sun,
clearly resolving only the
comet's coma, and
the characteristic cometary tails.
In 1986, however, the European spacecraft
Giotto
became one of the first
group of spacecraft
ever to encounter and
photograph the nucleus of a comet, passing and
imaging Halley's nucleus as it approached the sun.
Data from Giotto's camera were
used to generate
this enhanced image of the potato shaped nucleus that
measures roughly 15 kilometers across.
Some surface features on the
dark
nucleus are on the right, while gas and dust
flowing into Halley's coma are on the left.
Every 76 years
Comet
Halley returns to the inner Solar System
and each time the
nucleus sheds about a 6-meter deep layer of its
ice and rock into space.
This debris shed from
Halley's nucleus eventually disperses into an orbiting trail responsible for the
Orionids
meteor shower,
in October of every year, and the
Eta Aquariids meteor shower every May.