Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9
SL 9 Facts
- Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 was discovered by Eugene and Carolyn Shoemaker and
David Levy in 1993. Shortly after its discovery it was determined to be in
a highly elliptical
path near Jupiter and on a collision course.
It was difficult to calculate its orbit prior to its 1993 pass near the
giant planet.
- In 1993, SL 9 passed by Jupiter within the
Roche limit. It was broken into at least
21 separate fragments which were dispersed several million
kilometers along its orbit.
- The size and mass of the original body and the individual fragments is as of
this writing still highly uncertain. The estimates from 2 to 10 km in
diameter for the original body and 1 to 3 km for the largest fragments.
- Between 16 July 1994 and 22 July 1994 the fragments impacted the upper
atmosphere of Jupiter. This was the first time that scientists had an
opportunity to witness the collision of two extraterrestrial bodies.
- The impacts were observed by virtually every large
ground based telescope and by several spacecraft including
HST and
Galileo.
- The pictures were posted to the Net within hours of the impacts and caused
severe overloading on some ftp and WWW sites.
- The after-effects of the impacts were still visible on Jupiter in February 1995.
- There are linear chains of craters on Ganymede and
Callisto that are believed to
have been formed by the impacts of bodies similar to SL 9.
See Jovian split comet studies
for some images.
- SL 9 is no more, but its scientific legacy will be studied for years.
Pictures
- (above) SL 9 from HST 5/17/94 85k gif
SL 9 by HST 7/1/93
17k gif
Impact of Fragment A
128k gif
Impact of Fragment G
80k gif
HST picture of G impact site
168k gif
- pictorial index at SEDS
- The Top 20 Images from JPL
Movies
- many animations at JPL html
More about SL 9
Open Issues
- How long will the impact scars last? Will there be any long term effect
on Jupiter?
- How often does an event like this happen to Jupiter? to Earth?
- Preliminary spectrographic studies have failed to turn up the expected amount
of water in the impact sites. Was SL 9 deficient in water compared to most
comets?
... Sun
... Small Bodies
... Halley
... SL 9
... Kuiper/Oort
...
Bill Arnett; last updated:
1995 August 8