Refiner of Gold Creations'

Solar System -- Comets

A Most Unusual Comet
2060 Chiron
  • Pronounced KAI-ron.
  • Chiron orbits between Saturn and Uranus at 13.7 AU.
  • It was discovered in 1977 by astronomer Charles T. Kowal.
  • Revolution is 51.0 years.
  • It is about 250 km in diameter.
  • Density is about 0.005.
  • Composition possibly of carbonaceous soil over ice.
  • No atmosphere.
  • 2060 Chiron is a most unique interplanetary body.
    • Originally cataloged as an asteroid.
    • Initially showed up as a star-like point in early photographs.
  • After years of observations, a neutral gray color was established for Chiron.
  • Only slight discrepancies in brightness occurred.
  • Then it appeared nearly twice as bright as should be in February 1988.
  • Over a period of months Chiron became as much as three times it's normal brightness.
  • Chiron was slowly orbiting closer to the sun.
    • It was determined that Chiron contained ices.
    • Its orbital motion toward the sun warmed it.
    • Ices began changing into gas.
    • Chiron began throwing off a cloud of gas molecules and dust.
  • In April 1989, Chiron's status as a comet was confirmed when images showed an expanding coma, or cloud of dust, around Chiron.
  • After many months, Chiron's brightness faded.
    • Cometary eruptions seemed to have declined.
  • Chiron's surface is very dark, soot-blackened ice.
    • It would need to be rather large to reflect a substantial amount of light.
    • Observations estimated that its diameter is about 180-360 km (110-190 miles).
    • A diameter of about 250 km (160 miles) is a likely value.
  • Chiron is the largest known comet.
    • Because of its size and gravity, dust and gas from eruptions is not blown away into a tail.
    • Chiron's gravity grabs hold and keeps it in a cloud about the comet long after each eruption.
  • Soon after its discovery, Chiron's orbit was determined to be unstable.
    • Every few thousand years, it approaches Saturn.
    • It may, in about a million years, pass relatively close to Saturn.
    • As a result, it's orbit may then be radically changed.
    • Chiron may be thrown out of the solar system.
    • Or it might be thrown into the inner solar system.
    • At such time, it might then pass by Earth as one of the brighest comets of all time.
  • Due to the unstability of its orbit, Chiron must not have been in its present orbit for much of the solar system's 4,500-million-year history.
  • In 1992, a second, Chiron-like body was discovered:
    • 5145 Pholus was found in an elongated orbit.
    • Pholus orbits from just inside Saturn's orbit to just beyond Uranus' orbit.
    • This body has the most reddish-brown color observed in a comet.
    • These colors suggest an unusual composition.
    • Based on sectral analysis, astronomers have suggested that the colors come from organic compounds.
    • Whether it displays cometary behavior is yet to be seen.

~ | ~ Flyby Halley's Comet ~ | ~ Flyby Schwassmann-Wachmann 1 ~ | ~
~ | ~ Forward to Uranus ~ | ~ Back to Saturn ~ | ~
~ | ~ Forward to the Unknown ~ | ~ Back to Comets ~ | ~ Back to Pluto ~ | ~
~ | ~ Return to Solar System ~ | ~ Lexicon of Astronomy ~ | ~ Planetary Statistics ~ | ~
Refiner of Gold Creations
1998 Solar System Facts
Created by EMC on 6/23/1997. Updated 5/4/2005.