C/2019 Y4 (ATLAS)

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C/2019 Y4 (ATLAS)
2019Y4-20200314.jpg
C/2019 Y4 (ATLAS) imaged on March 14, 2020
Discovery
Discovered by Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System (ATLAS)
Discovery dateDecember 28, 2019
Designations
C/2019 Y4-A; C/2019 Y4-B; C/2019 Y4-C; C/2019 Y4-D; C/2019 Y4-E
Orbital characteristics [1]
Epoch March 7, 2020
(JD 2458915.5)
Observation arc 115 days
Number of
observations
1250
Aphelion 660.9626±3.2491 AU
Perihelion 0.2528 AU
Semi-major axis 330.6077±1.6252 AU
Eccentricity 0.99924
Orbital period 6011.43±44.33 yr
Inclination 45.3839°
120.5721°
Argument of
periapsis
177.4084°
Last perihelionMay 31, 2020
TJupiter 0.454
Earth MOID 0.631177 AU (94,422,700 km)
Jupiter MOID 1.39373 AU
Comet total
magnitude
(M1)
9.9±0.9 [2]
Comet nuclear
magnitude (M2)
13.1±0.7 [2]

C/2019 Y4 (ATLAS) (or Comet ATLAS) was a comet with a near-parabolic orbit discovered by the ATLAS survey on December 28, 2019. [3] Early predictions based on the brightening rate suggested that the comet could become as bright as magnitude 0 matching the brightness of Vega. [4] It received widespread media coverage due to its dramatic increase in brightness and orbit similar to the Great Comet of 1844, but on March 22, 2020, the comet started disintegrating. [5] [6] Such fragmentation events are very common for Kreutz Sungrazers. The comet continues to fade and did not reach naked eye visibility. [4] By mid-May, comet ATLAS appeared very diffuse even in a telescope. C/2019 Y4 (ATLAS) has not been seen since May 21, 2020. [7]

Contents

C/2019 Y4 (ATLAS) was the brightest on March 30 when it had an apparent magnitude of about 7, but after disintegrating, it continued to fade, until it was last observed on May 21. It is located in the constellation Monoceros but is no longer visible. It reached its nearest point to Earth on May 23 and come to perihelion (closest to the Sun) on May 31.

In April 2020, astronomers reported, on The Astronomer's Telegram , the possible disintegration of Comet ATLAS. [5] [6] [8] The comet has fragmented into at least 4 pieces. [9] [10] NASA subsequently reported that the Hubble Space Telescope has identified that there could be as many as roughly "30 fragments on April 20, and 25 pieces on April 23." [11] The fragmentation may be the result of outgassing causing an increase in the centrifugal force of the comet.

The Solar Orbiter flew through the ion tail of comet ATLAS between May 31 and June 1 and the dust tail on June 6. [12] [13]

Discovery

Comet ATLAS was discovered on CCD images taken on December 28, 2019, with a 0.5 m (20 in) reflecting telescope atop Mauna Loa in Hawaii. [14] The images were taken as part of the Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System (ATLAS). At the time of its discovery, the comet shone at magnitude  19.6 in the constellation Ursa Major as viewed from Earth. [15] [16] Larry Denneau was the first to identify the object's cometary appearance, [15] placing the object on the Minor Planet Center's Possible Comet Confirmation Page, alerting other astronomers. Further observations over subsequent days identified a coma; a comet tail became increasingly apparent as observations continued. [14]

Initial observation and brightness

Comet ATLAS - reduced coma (April 15, 2020) Comet Atlas with reduced Coma .jpg
Comet ATLAS – reduced coma (April 15, 2020)

Between the beginning of February and near the end of March, Comet ATLAS brightened from magnitude 17 to magnitude 8, representing a 4000-fold increase in brightness. [17] In March 2020, the comet's brightness increased four magnitudes. [16] C/2019 Y4's green or aqua colour arose from emissions of diatomic carbon with a 1.2° or 10' or 3.3 million km multicolour tail, more than twice as wide as the Sun. As a diffuse object, the comet would need to reach an apparent magnitude of around 34 to be obvious to the casual observer in a dark sky. A 4th magnitude comet in bright twilight is not very impressive nor obvious. In early April, the comet faded due to a significant fragmentation event. [18] On April 14, 2020, initial estimates of water production by the comet were reported, and found "a water production rate of 1.25×1028 +/− 5×1025 mol/sec within an aperture of 100,000 km". [19]

Orbit

Fragments of Comet ATLAS as observed by the Hubble Space Telescope in late April 2020 Hubble Watches Comet ATLAS Disintegrate Into More Than Two Dozen Pieces (49832598833).png
Fragments of Comet ATLAS as observed by the Hubble Space Telescope in late April 2020

At the time of its discovery Comet ATLAS was nearly 3  astronomical units (AU) from the Sun. [16] The first orbital calculations for the comet were published on the Minor Planet Electronic Circular, and were based on observations taken between December 28, 2019, and January 9, 2020, which indicating a 4,400-year orbital period and a perihelion of 0.25 AU. Similarities were noted between the orbital elements of C/2019 Y4 and the Great Comet of 1844 (C/1844 Y1), suggesting that C/2019 Y4 is a fragment of the same parent body, split about five thousands years ago. [20] [21] [14] [22]

The JPL Small-Body Database using an epoch of February 18, 2020, shows C/2019 Y4 (ATLAS) with an orbital period of approximately 6,000 years, but this solution includes misleading perturbations while inside of the planetary region. A more useful barycentric solution before the comet entered the planetary region shows an inbound orbital period of about 4,800 years. [23] The comet reached its nearest point to the Sun on May 31, 2020. [2] After leaving the planetary region, the comet will have an outbound orbital period of about 5,200 years.

The fragmentation of C/2019 Y4 in late March 2020, [21] has changed the velocities of the fragments by up to 10 meters/second (25000 km/month). This small change in velocity can cause a big change in the long-term orbital period of these near-parabolic fragments. The short observation arc of ~10 days for fragments D&E results in large uncertainties in the orbital periods. Fragment B was observed the longest. Fragment D may have come the closest to Earth but due to the short observation arc has an uncertainty of ±2 million km in the close approach distance. [24]

Orbital period of fragments
FragmentOrbital period
(years)
Closest Approach
to Earth
obs arc
(days)
C/2019 Y4-Aejection [25] 0.7858  AU (117.55 million  km )27
C/2019 Y4-B17200±2300 [26] 0.7816 AU (116.93 million km)40
C/2019 Y4-Cejection [27] 0.7824 AU (117.05 million km)26
C/2019 Y4-D126±86 [28] 0.7777 AU (116.34 million km)8
C/2019 Y4-E88±32 [29] 0.7794 AU (116.60 million km)6

Location

During January to March 2020, the comet was located in the constellation of Ursa Major. Throughout the month of April, the comet was in the constellation of Camelopardalis. On May 12 it moved into Perseus. It was 0.78  AU (117 million  km ; 300  LD ) from Earth on May 23 during a new moon when the comet was 17 degrees from the Sun. At its perihelion on May 31, it was in the Taurus constellation 12 degrees from the Sun. [30] Then, through June and July, it passed through Orion and Monoceros.

C/2019 Y4 (ATLAS)
Comet 2019 Y4 ATLAS-sky.png
Comet ATLAS's trajectory in the sky with 7-day markers. The retrograde loops are caused by parallax from Earth's annual motion around the Sun. The most movement occurs when the comet is closest to Earth.
Comet 2019 Y4 ATLAS from Catalonia.gif
Animation of C/2019 Y4 (ATLAS) imaged over 10 minutes on March 28, 2020
Comet Atlas Observed on April 08,2020.gif
C/2019 Y4 (ATLAS) as imaged on April 8, 2020. Note its faded appearance resulting from its disintegration.

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References

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    Goto JPL Horizons
    Ephemeris Type: Orbital Elements
    Center: @0 (Solar System Barycenter)
    Time Span: 1950-01-01 to 2050-01-01 and Step Size: 100 years
    1950-Jan-01 is "PR= 1.76E+06 / 365.25 days" = 4818 years
  24. JPL Horizons Fragment D Table Setting "39. Range" for 2020-May-23 06:44
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  26. JPL SBDB: C/2019 Y4-B
  27. JPL SBDB: C/2019 Y4-C
  28. JPL SBDB: C/2019 Y4-D
  29. JPL SBDB: C/2019 Y4-E
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