NASA Preparing for 2014 Comet Watch at Mars
This spring, NASA will be paying cautious attention to a comet that could put
on a barnstorming show at Mars on Oct. 19, 2014.
On that date, comet C/2013 A1 Siding Spring will buzz Mars about 10 times
closer than any identified comet has ever flown past Earth.
Spacecraft at Mars might get a good look at the nucleus of comet Siding
Spring as it heads toward the closest approach, roughly 86,000 miles (138,000
kilometers) from the planet, give or take a few percent. On the other hand, dust
particles that the comet nucleus sheds this spring could threaten orbiting
spacecraft at Mars in October.
The level of risk won’t be known for months, but NASA is already evaluating
possible precautionary measures as it prepares for studying the comet.
"Our plans for using spacecraft at Mars to observe comet Siding Spring will
be coordinated with plans for how the orbiters will duck and cover, if we need
to do that," said Rich Zurek, Mars Exploration Program chief scientist at NASA's
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
Comet Siding Spring, formally named C/2013 A1, was discovered on Jan. 3,
2013, from Australia's Siding Spring Observatory. At the time, it was farther
from the sun than Jupiter is. Subsequent observations enabled scientists at JPL
and elsewhere to calculate the trajectory the comet will follow as it swings
past Mars.
Observations in 2014 will continue to refine knowledge of the comet's
path, but in approximate terms, Siding Spring's nucleus will come about as close
to Mars as one-third of the distance between Earth and the moon.
Observations of comet Siding Spring are planned using resources on Earth,
orbiting Earth, on Mars and orbiting Mars, and some are already underway.
NASA's Hubble Space Telescope and the NEOWISE mission have observed the comet
this month both to characterize this first-time visitor from the Oort cloud and
to study dust particle sizes and amounts produced by the comet for understanding
potential risks to the Mars orbiters. Infrared imaging by NEOWISE reveals a
comet that is active and dusty, even though still nearly three-fourths as far
from the sun as Jupiter is. Ground-based observatories such as the NASA Infrared
Telescope Facility are also expected to join in as the comet becomes favorably
positioned for viewing.
As the comet nears Mars, NASA assets there will be used to study this visitor
from distant reaches of the solar system.
"We could learn about the nucleus -- its shape, its rotation, whether some
areas on its surface are darker than others," Zurek said.
Researchers using spacecraft at Mars gained experience at trying to observe a
different comet in 2013, as comet ISON (formally C/2012 S1) approached Mars.
That comet's Mars-flyby distance was about 80 times farther than Siding Spring's
will be. Another difference is that ISON continued inward past Mars for nearly
two months, briefly becoming visible to some unaided-eye skywatchers on Earth
before flying very close to the sun and disintegrating. Siding Spring will reach
its closest approach to the sun just six days after its Mars flyby. It won't put
on a show for Earth, and it won't return to the inner solar system for about a
million years.
At comet Siding Spring's flyby distance, the High Resolution Imaging Science
Experiment (HiRISE) camera on NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter could provide
imagery with resolution of dozens of pixels across the diameter of the nucleus.
When HiRISE observed comet ISON, the nucleus was less than one pixel across.
ISON did not get bright enough to make itself visible to other cameras at Mars
that made attempted observations, but Siding Spring could provide a better
observation opportunity.
Cameras on the Mars rovers Curiosity and Opportunity might watch for meteors
in the sky that would be an indication of the abundance of particles in the
comet's tail, though the geometry of the flyby would put most of the meteors in
daytime sky instead of dark sky.
"A third aspect for investigation could be what effect the infalling
particles have on the upper atmosphere of Mars," Zurek said. "They might heat it
and expand it, not unlike the effect of a global dust storm." Infrared-sensing
instruments on Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter and Odyssey might be used to watch
for that effect.
One trait Siding Spring shares with ISON is unpredictability about how much
it will brighten in the months before passing Mars. The degree to which Siding
Spring brightens this spring will be an indicator of how much hazard it will
present to spacecraft at Mars.
"It's way too early for us to know how much of a threat Siding Spring will be
to our orbiters," JPL's Soren Madsen, Mars Exploration Program chief engineer,
said last week. "It could go either way. It could be a huge deal or it could be
nothing -- or anything in between."
The path the nucleus will take is now known fairly well. The important
unknowns are how much dust will come off the nucleus, when it will come off, and
the geometry of the resulting coma and tail of the comet.
During April and May, the comet will cross the range of distances from the
sun at which water ice on a comet's surface typically becomes active --
vaporizing and letting dust particles loose. Dust ejected then could get far
enough from the nucleus by October to swarm around Mars.
"How active will Siding Spring be in April and May? We'll be watching that,"
Madsen said. "But if the red alarm starts sounding in May, it would be too late
to start planning how to respond. That's why we're doing what we're doing right
now."
Two key strategies to lessen risk are to get orbiters behind Mars during the
minutes of highest risk and to orient orbiters so that the most vulnerable parts
are not in the line of fire.
The Martian atmosphere, thin as it is, is dense enough to prevent dust from
the comet from becoming a hazard to NASA's two Mars rovers active on the
surface. Three orbiters are currently active at Mars: NASA's Mars
Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) and Mars Odyssey, and the European Space Agency's
Mars Express. Two more departed Earth in late 2013 and are due to enter orbit
around Mars about three weeks before the comet Siding Spring flyby: NASA's Mars
Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution (MAVEN) and India's Mars Orbiter Mission.
Orbiters are designed with the risk of space-dust collisions in mind. Most
such collisions do not damage a mission. Design factors such as blanketing and
protected placement of vulnerable components help. Over a five-year span for a
Mars orbiter, NASA figures on a few percent chance of significant damage to a
spacecraft from the background level of impacts from such particles, called
meteoroids. Whether the Siding Spring level will pack that much hazard -- or
perhaps greater than 10 times more -- into a few hours will depend on how active
it becomes.
This comet is orbiting the sun in almost the opposite direction as Mars and
the other planets. The nucleus and the dust particles it sheds will be
travelling at about 35 miles (56 kilometers) per second, relative to the Mars
orbiters. That's about 50 times faster than a bullet from a high-powered rifle
and double or triple the velocity of background meteoroid impacts.
If managers choose to position orbiters behind Mars during the peak risk, the
further in advance any orbit-adjustment maneuvers can be made, the less fuel
will be consumed. Advance work is also crucial for the other main option:
reorienting a spacecraft to keep its least-vulnerable side facing the oncoming
stream of comet particles. The safest orientation in terms of comet dust may be
a poor one for maintaining power or communications.
"These changes would require a huge amount of testing," Madsen said. "There's
a lot of preparation we need to do now, to prepare ourselves in case we learn in
May that the flyby will be hazardous."
JPL, a division of the California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, manages
the NASA's Mars Exploration Program for NASA's Science Mission Directorate,
Washington. For more information about the flyby of Mars by comet Siding Spring,
visit http://mars.nasa.gov/comets/sidingspring/
.
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