Bright comets display a rich variety of interesting plasma phenomena which occur over an enormous range of spatial scales, and which require different observational techniques to be studied effectively. Wide-angle photography of high time resolution is probably the best method of studying the phenomenon of largest known scale: the plasma tail disconnection event (DE), which has been attributed to magnetic reconnection at interplanetary sector boundary crossings. These structures usually accelerate as they recede from the head region and observed velocities are typically in the range 50 V km/s. They are often visible for several days following the time of disconnection, and are sometimes seen out past 0.2 AU from the cometary head. The fol...
Known facts about comets are reviewed including their organic and inorganic content. Photographs are...
Because of their temporal and spatial variations, modern ground-based studies of comets within appro...
Comets C/2001 Q4 (NEAT) and C/2002 T7 (LINEAR) passed within ~0.3 AU of Earth in April and May of 20...
Disconnection Events are the dramatic part of the periodic morphology involving the separation of th...
The disconnection event (DE) consists of the periodic loss of a comet's entire plasma tail and the g...
Cometary and solar wind data from December 1985 through April 1986 are presented for the purpose of ...
Comets hold the key to the understanding of our solar system, its formation and its evolution, and t...
The plasma tail of Comet Austin (1989c1) showed remarkable disturbances because of the solar maximum...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/94832/1/jgra18723.pd
On April 29, 1990, the plasma tail of Comet Austin was observed with a CCD camera on the 105-cm Schm...
Comets hold the key to the understanding of our solar system, its formation and its evolution, and t...
The appearance of the bright comet Austin 1989c1 in April-May of 1990 allowed us to test a new imagi...
International audienceComets hold the key to the understanding of our Solar System, its formation an...
The encounters of five spacecraft with Halley's Comet during 6-14 March 1986 offered a unique opport...
Photographic plates of the moving structures in the cometary tail are examined. Several divergent ex...
Known facts about comets are reviewed including their organic and inorganic content. Photographs are...
Because of their temporal and spatial variations, modern ground-based studies of comets within appro...
Comets C/2001 Q4 (NEAT) and C/2002 T7 (LINEAR) passed within ~0.3 AU of Earth in April and May of 20...
Disconnection Events are the dramatic part of the periodic morphology involving the separation of th...
The disconnection event (DE) consists of the periodic loss of a comet's entire plasma tail and the g...
Cometary and solar wind data from December 1985 through April 1986 are presented for the purpose of ...
Comets hold the key to the understanding of our solar system, its formation and its evolution, and t...
The plasma tail of Comet Austin (1989c1) showed remarkable disturbances because of the solar maximum...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/94832/1/jgra18723.pd
On April 29, 1990, the plasma tail of Comet Austin was observed with a CCD camera on the 105-cm Schm...
Comets hold the key to the understanding of our solar system, its formation and its evolution, and t...
The appearance of the bright comet Austin 1989c1 in April-May of 1990 allowed us to test a new imagi...
International audienceComets hold the key to the understanding of our Solar System, its formation an...
The encounters of five spacecraft with Halley's Comet during 6-14 March 1986 offered a unique opport...
Photographic plates of the moving structures in the cometary tail are examined. Several divergent ex...
Known facts about comets are reviewed including their organic and inorganic content. Photographs are...
Because of their temporal and spatial variations, modern ground-based studies of comets within appro...
Comets C/2001 Q4 (NEAT) and C/2002 T7 (LINEAR) passed within ~0.3 AU of Earth in April and May of 20...