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The “Inevitable” Fragmentation of Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS

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July 12, 2024: Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS (C/2023 A3) is about to fall apart. It’s “inevitable,” according to a new study by astronomer Zdenek Sekanina. “Evidence suggests that the comet has entered an advanced phase of fragmentation,” he writes.

Above: Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS photographed by José J. Chambó

If true, this is disappointing news. Discovered in early 2023, the comet appears to be heading for a magnificent close encounter with the sun later this year, perhaps becoming as bright as Venus in October 2024. Instead, it could fall apart before it has a chance to become a naked-eye object.

Sekanina’s arguments are threefold: First, the comet has failed to brighten as it approaches the sun. Second, the comet’s orbit seems to be affected by a “non-gravitational acceleration.” This could happen if, say, inner jets are pushing apart a disintegrating nucleus. Third, the comet’s dust tail has an unusually narrow, teardrop shape with a peculiar orientation. 

Together, these observations suggest a crumbling comet “in which increasing numbers of fractured refractory solids stay assembled in dark, porous blobs of exotic shape, becoming undetectable as they gradually disperse in space,” says Sekanina.

Above: This is what a break-up looks like–Comet LINEAR 24 years ago.

“That is a fascinating paper,” says Nick James, director of the Comet Section of the British Astronomical Association. “Sekanina is very well respected in the field, so it carries a lot of weight. To use ‘inevitable’ in any prediction about a comet may be unwise! But it is definitely a testable theory and another good reason to observe this comet at every opportunity.”

In fact, James isn’t convinced. In an independent data set, he finds no evidence of non-gravitational accelerations. “This doesn’t look like a comet that is fragmenting to me,” he says.

We’ll soon find out. The comet is brighter than 10th magnitude, well within range of mid-sized backyard telescopes, which means amateur astronomers can monitor the potential break-up. Point your optics here


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