Has a Comet Hit Jupiter?

July 19, 2009

This is a little too mystical for my tastes, but on the cusp of Walter Cronkite’s passing, and the Apollo 11 moon landing 40th anniversary, a mysterious dark spot has appeared on Jupiter.

Jupiter spot

The dark feature was first observed at approximately 13:30 universal time today by amateur astronomer Anthony Wesley from his home observatory just outside Murrumbateman NSW Australia. Wesley photographed Jupiter through a 14.5 inch Newtonian reflector.

Science fiction fans will remember the closing chapters of Arthur C. Clarke’s 2010: Odyssey Two when black alien monoliths began popping up in Jupiter’s atmosphere.

The explanation for this one is a bit more down to Earth, per the observer’s posting tonight: 

“Preliminary image showing a black mark in Jupiters South Polar Region (SPR) which is almost certainly the result of a large impact - either an asteroid or comet - similar to the Shoemaker-Levy impacts in 1994.”

Let me caution that as of this writing the spot has not been reported being sighted independently by anyone else. Also, it is too near the pole to be a satellite shadow, and also moves with the planet’s rotation according to Wesley.

Beginning on July 20 1994, a string of comet pieces, from the breakup of comet Shoemaker-Levy 9, bombarded Jupiter for nearly a week. Each fragment exploded in Jupiter’s atmosphere and blew black material above the cloud tops. Now, the new spot is reminiscent of the scars let behind by SL9 exactly 15 years ago.

The SL9 event was considered a once in 10,000-year spectacle. But individual comet or asteroid collisions may happen much more frequently on Jupiter. Prior to SL9 dark spots had been occasionally reported in Jupiter's atmosphere. But their origin was not understood. 

This will reinvigorate 2012 soothsayers that strange cosmic events are coming becasue of the end of the Mayan calendar. But for the rest of us more pragmatic observers, this unusual event will be followed closely by telescopes all over the world over the next few days. 

about

Ray Villard writes on popular astronomy topics for magazines, radio shows and planetariums and is the news director for the Hubble Space Telescope.



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