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Once in million years: Comet buzzing Mars on Sunday


Comet C/2013 A1, also known as Siding Spring, was captured by Wide Field Camera 3 on NASA's Hubble Space Telescope in March. It will skim past Mars on Sunday at 126,000 mph.
Comet C/2013 A1, also known as Siding Spring, was captured by Wide Field Camera 3 on NASA's Hubble Space Telescope in March. It will skim past Mars on Sunday at 126,000 mph. Associated Press

The heavens are hosting an event this weekend that occurs once in a million years or so.

A comet as hefty as a small mountain will pass mind-bogglingly close to Mars on Sunday, approaching within 87,000 miles at a speed of 126,000 mph.

NASA’s five robotic explorers at Mars – three orbiters and two rovers – are being repurposed to witness a comet named Siding Spring make its first known visit to the inner solar system. So are a European and an Indian spacecraft circling the red planet.

The orbiting craft will attempt to observe the incoming iceball, then hide behind Mars for protection from potentially dangerous dusty debris in the comet tail.

Shielded by the Martian atmosphere, the Opportunity and Curiosity rovers may well have the best seats in the house, although a dust storm on Mars could obscure the view.

“We certainly have fingers crossed for the first images of a comet from the surface of another world,” said NASA program scientist Kelly Fast.

Spacecraft farther afield, including the Hubble Space Telescope, already are keeping a sharp lookout, as are ground observatories and research balloons.

“We’re getting ready for a spectacular set of observations,” said Jim Green, head of NASA’s planetary science division.

Named for the Australian observatory used to detect it in January 2013, Siding Spring will approach Mars from beneath and zoom right in front Sunday afternoon.

On Earth, the best viewing, via binoculars or telescope, will be from the Southern Hemisphere – South Africa and Australia will be in prime position. In the Northern Hemisphere, it will be difficult to see Siding Spring slide by Mars.

The comet – with a nucleus estimated to be at least a half-mile in diameter – hails from the Oort Cloud on the extreme fringe of the solar system. It formed during the first million or two years of the solar system’s birth 4.6 billion years ago and, until now, ventured no closer to the sun than perhaps the orbits of Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus or Neptune. It comes around every one or more million years.

It will be the first Oort Cloud comet to be studied up close in detail.

Scientists initially worried the spacecraft orbiting Mars would be at considerable risk from the comet’s massive trail of dust.

The nucleus itself poses no danger of impact. But the particles in the tail, hurtling through space at 126,000 mph could fry electronics, puncture fuel lines, or destroy computers, transmitters or other vital spacecraft parts.

As Siding Spring’s path became clearer, the threat level was deemed minimal. Still, space agencies are taking no chances. They’re employing the “duck and cover” strategy.

NASA’s three orbiters – Mars Odyssey, Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter and newcomer Maven – will be behind the red planet at the time of peak danger. That’s a 20-minute-or-so period approximately 1 1/2 hours after the closest approach by the comet’s nucleus.

The European Space Agency also shifted the orbit of its Mars Express as did India for its Mars Orbiter Mission, or MOM, the country’s first interplanetary spacecraft that, like NASA’s Maven, arrived last month.

Siding Spring should pass closest to the sun six days after its Mars flyby, then swing back out, bidding goodbye, for at least another million years.

This story was originally published October 16, 2014 at 8:07 PM with the headline "Once in million years: Comet buzzing Mars on Sunday."

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