Comet could hit, radically change Mars in 2014
Mar 3, 2013 | Phenomenica
New observations confirm that a comet heading toward Mars could
collide with it in October 2014, possibly ushering in radical
environmental changes on the Red Planet, astronomy experts said.
The C/2013 A1 comet may pass as close as 37,000 km from the surface
of Mars, according to data published Wednesday by the New Mexico-based
ISON-NM observatory.
“A collision scenario is becoming more likely, though its possibility
remains low,” Leonid Elenin, a Russia-based amateur astronomer in
charge of the remotely managed ISON-NM, told RIA Novosti.
More precise data will be available after further observation of the
comet, said Elenin, who works at the Keldysh Institute of Applied
Mathematics at the Russian Academy of Sciences and has already
discovered two comets – though not the C/2013 A1.
That was first identified as a comet in January by the
Australia-based Siding Spring observatory, which on its website
confirmed the possibility of the comet’s collision with Mars.
A possible impact would release up to 20 billion megatons of energy
and leave a crater 500 km wide and two km deep, given that the comet is
10 to 50 km wide and moving at a speed of 56 km per second in respect to
the planet, according to ISON-NM’s data.
A collision with C/2013 A1 could result in a radical transformation
of Mars, said Robert Matson, an aerospace engineer and meteor expert who
worked with members of the Finnish Fireball Working Group of the Ursa
Astronomical Association, according to the UniverseToday.com space news
website.
The impact could raise enough dust and release enough frozen carbon
dioxide to radically change Mars’ atmosphere, Matson said in emailed
comments Thursday.
The blow could either enhance the greenhouse effect, resulting in a
thicker atmosphere, or cause surface temperature on Mars to plummet
because the dust would obscure the Sun, Matson said.
The comet could also trigger volcanic activity at the impact site, he said.
Even if C/2013 A1 misses Mars, the planet will certainly pass through
its coma, or gaseous envelope, which is 100,000 km in diameter, Elenin
wrote on ISON-NM’s website. A NASA probe, MAVEN, is scheduled for launch
into Mars’ orbit in September 2014. This will enable NASA to closely
monitor the comet’s trajectory.
IANS
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