Comet A1 Siding Spring vs Mars: Views in Space and Time

Mars-Comet-Siding-Spring-NEOWISE-PIA18593-br2.jpg

Oh, to be a stranded astronaut on the surface of the planet Mars this week. There's a great scene from Andy Weir's recent novel

The Martian

where chief protagonist Mark Watney uses the swift moving moons of Phobos and Deimos to roughly gauge his direction while travelling across the expansive Martian desert.

This week, the skies over Mars will also be graced by an unforgettable and spectacular sight: the

extremely close passage

of Comet C/2013 A1 Siding Spring. The first comet discovered in 2013,

A1 Siding Spring

was spotted by veteran comet hunter Robert McNaught from the Siding Spring Observatory in Australia. Dozens of comets are discovered in any given year, but this one soon gained the attention of astronomers when it was found that the comet could possibly hit Mars in October 2014.

And although further observations refined A1 Siding Spring's orbit and ruled out such an impact, the particulars of the close passage of the comet past Mars are still stunning: A1 Siding Spring will pass within 87,000 miles (139,500 kilometres) from the center of Mars on Sunday, October 19

th

at 18:27 Universal Time (UT) or 2:27 PM EDT.

And although we've yet to set "boots" on Mars, a fleet of spacecraft arrayed throughout the inner solar system are set to study the comet from both near and far. NASA has

taken measures

to assure that spacecraft in orbit are afforded maximum protection from incoming cometary debris, and the exciting possibility exists that we'll be able to study first-hand the interaction of the comet's tail with the Martian atmosphere.

[caption id="attachment_115290" align="alignnone" width="580"]

Mars-based spacecraft set to observe Comet A1 Siding Spring: a scorecard.

Credit

NASA.[/caption]

Universe Today

has

written extensively

on the scientific efforts to study the event, how to

observe the comet

from Earth, and the unprecedented amateur and professional campaign in progress to witness the close pass.

What we'd like to do now is imagine the unparalleled view under alien skies as the comet slides gracefully overhead.

The nucleus of A1 Siding Spring is thought to be

700 metres across

, and the coma extends 19,300 km in diameter. The comet's closest passage is just under six times the distance of Mars' outer moon Deimos, and at closest approach, the coma will appear almost 8 degrees in size to any would-be Martian — that's 16 times the diameter of a Full Moon as seen from the Earth — and will be crossing the skies at a staggering 1.5 degrees

a minute

. You would be able to easily see the motion of the comet as it moves across the Martian sky with the unaided (well, space suit helmet protected) eye after just a few dozen seconds worth of watching! The comet's magnitude may reach -5 as seen from Mars, though that would also be extended over its huge expanded surface area.

The enormous tail of the comet would also span the sky, and NASA has already released several mind blowing simulations to this effect. We've also constructed some brief simulations using Starry Night that show the view of the encounter from Earth, Phobos, and the perspective from the comet itself:

There's also been some discussion as of late that A1 Siding Spring has slowed down in terms of its predicted brightening, though this is not unusual or unexpected.

From Acidalia Planitia (the setting for

The Martian

) located in the mid-northern latitudes on the surface of Mars, the comet would be a fine morning object, sitting 48 degrees above the northeastern horizon at dawn at closest passage for one morning only, and perhaps staying visible even after sunrise. Earth would be in the picture too, shining at magnitude -2.5 in the Martian dawn.

[caption id="attachment_115293" align="alignnone" width="580"]

Dawn on October 19th, 2014, as seen from Mars. Created using Starry Night.[/caption]

And the view from the comet? Now that would be a

truly

spectacular ride, as Mars swells to 3 degrees in diameter as it approaches and recedes. The comet itself is on a million year plus orbit, never to again visit the realm of the inner solar system in our lifetimes.

Such a view has never been seen in recorded history from the Earth. The

closest confirmed passage of a large comet

near our planet was

Comet D/1770 L1 Lexell

, which passed over 15 times more distant than A1 Siding Spring from Mars, at 2.2 million km from Earth on July 1

st

, 1770. Note that an even closer cometary passage in 1491 remains unverified. In more recent times, Comet Hyakutake passed 15.8 million km from Earth on March 25

th

, 1996, with a tail that spanned half the sky as seen from a dark sky site, and long-time comet observers might also remember the 1983 passage of Comet

IRAS-Araki-Alcock

, which passed just 4.7 million kilometres from the Earth.

[caption id="attachment_115294" align="alignnone" width="580"]

A1 Siding Spring imaged from Earth on October 11th, 2014.

Credit

Efrain Morales Rivera.[/caption]

And then there was the historic impact on

Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9

into Jupiter in 1994, reminding us that cosmic catastrophes can and do indeed occur… the upper size limit estimate for the nucleus of A1 Siding Spring compares to 70% the size of Fragment G, and an impact on Earth or Mars of such a dirty snowball would be a very bad day, for rovers or the humans. An extinction level event such as the

Chicxulub impactor

, however, was estimated to be much larger, at about 10 km in size.

[caption id="attachment_115295" align="alignnone" width="580"]

A1 Siding Springs as imaged on September 3rd, 2014.

Credit

Roger Hutchinson.[/caption]

Thankfully, we've merely got a front row seat to the show this weekend, and our planet is not the main event.

From Earth

, Comet A1 Siding Spring will be a binocular object,

shining at magnitude +9

as it passes 3' from +0.9 magnitude Mars. Both will be visible briefly in dusk skies, and the Virtual Telescope Project also plans to

broadcast the event live

starting at 16:45 UT on October 19th.

Don't miss the historic passage of Comet A1 Siding Spring past Mars… by this time next week, we fully expect more images of the comet — both amateur and professional — to grace the cyber-pages of

Universe Today

!

  • Imaging A1 Siding Spring and/or Mars? Send those astro-pics into Universe Today at our Flickr forum.
David Dickinson

David Dickinson

David Dickinson is a freelance science writer and long-time sky watcher. He has built telescopes and observatories, chased eclipses, and travels and observes with his wife, Myscha, on a mission to get ‘eyes on the sky’ worldwide. His books The Universe Today Ultimate Guide to Observing the Cosmos, The Astronomer’s Deep-Sky Field Guide and science fiction short stories are available here.