History of comet study
It was not settled whether comets are atmospheric phenomena or interplanetary objects until the 16th century, when Tycho Brahe measured that they must be outside of the Earth's atmosphere. In the 17th century, Edmond Halley used the theory of gravitation, recently developed by Isaac Newton, to try to calculate the orbits of comets. He then found that one of them periodically came back to the vicinity of the sun every 76-77th year. Soon this comet became known as Comet Halley, and from ancient sources it is known to have been observed by humans at least since 66 BC.
The second comet to be discovered to have a periodic orbit was Comet Encke, in 1821. Like Halley's comet, it is named after the calculator, the German mathematician and physicist Johann Franz Encke, that found it to be a periodic comet. Usually, comets get their names after their discoverer(s). Encke's comet has the shortest period of any comet, only 3.3 years and, because of this, more recorded appearances than any other comet. It was also the first comet whose orbit was noticed to be influenced by non-gravitional forces (see below). Although it is now usually too faint to be visible with the naked eye, it may have been a bright comet a few thousand years ago before most of its surface ice had evaporated. So far, it is not known to have been observed before 1786. Maybe an improved analysis of its orbit before that will find that it actually is noted in ancient sources. However, if it is a very old comet then its only naked eye visibility would have been many thousands of years ago. Even longer if it was originally a large comet, such as Comet Hale-Bopp. If it was even larger, a Centaur for instance, it would take hundreds of thousands of years to wear out.
The actual nature of comets were speculated over for centuries. In the early 19th century another German mathematician, Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel, was on the right track. He created a theory about the brightness of the comets coming from the evaporation from a solid object and that the non-gravitational forces of comet Encke were caused by the jet forces created as the material evaporated from the surface of the object. His idea was forgotten for more than 100 years, before Fred Lawrence Whipple independently proposed the same idea in 1950. It soon became the accepted comet model and was confirmed when an armada of spacecraft (including the European Space Agency's Giotto probe and the Soviet Union's Vega 1 and Vega 2) flew through the coma of Halley's comet in 1986 to photograph the nucleus and observed the jets of evaporating material. The American probe Deep Space 1 flew past the nucleus of Comet Borrelly on September 21 2001 and confirmed that the characteristics of Comet Halley are common in other comets as well.
The Stardust spacecraft was launched in February 1999 and collected particles from the coma of Comet Wild 2 in January 2004. Sample material will be returned to Earth with a capsule in 2006.
Some well-known comets are :
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