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The Impact on Jupiter!

July 20, 2009
by The Editors of Sky & Telescope

Jupiter impact on August 19, 2009
Taken on July 19, 2009, Anthony Wesley's image of Jupiter shows a dark marking strikingly similar to the ones left when Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 crashed into Jupiter in 1994. South is up.
Anthony Wesley
The image at right, taken by Anthony Wesley, a well-known Australian astrophotographer and planetary observer, shows a new dark marking on Jupiter strikingly similar to the ones left when Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 crashed into the giant planet in 1994. The dark mark, which appeared suddenly between July 17th and 19th, was quickly confirmed by many other observers. Amateurs have been spotting it in 4-inch and smaller telescopes, at least when Jupiter is high after midnight and the atmospheric seeing steadies up. Wesley has put up a Jupiter impact page with more of his own images.

There is compelling evidence, such as the mark's high infrared brightness in reflected sunlight, that it is black dust resulting from the impact of an asteroid or comet. Jupiter's atmosphere normally contains no dust. Leigh Fletcher twittered from NASA's Infrared Telescope Facility in Hawaii: "This has all the hallmarks of SL-9 in 1994 (15 years to the day!). High altitude particulates, looks nothing like weather phenom." (Keep up with Fletcher's tweets, and read his July 22nd blog post about the impact).

Jupiter's black impact scar on the night of July 20, 2009
"Here is the spot recorded this morning in marginal seeing," writes S&T's Sean Walker. "It appears to me to be spreading out as predicted." The shot was made with a 14.5-inch reflector and stacked video at 3:46 UT July 21, 2009.
S&T: Sean Walker
The spot is located near Jupiter's System II longitude 210°. For the predicted times when it will cross the planet's central meridian, add 2 hours and 6 minutes to each of our predicted transit times for Jupiter's Great Red Spot.

If it's really black debris dredged up by an impact, it will probably become spread out horizontally by jet streams in the coming days, and will thin out to invisibility in a matter of weeks and months — as did the marks from Comet S-L 9.

UPDATES

July 24:More amateur photos are posted at the Spaceweather.com pages for July 21, July 24, and July 28.

The Jet Propulsion Lab quickly put out a news release with near-infrared (reflected-light) images (also available here if the first site is overloaded.)

Here's a local article from Australia on Anthony Wesley and his discovery.

Keck Observatory takes infrared images.

Here's a fine two-color mid-infrared (i.e. thermal glow) image from the 8.1-meter Gemini North telescope taken on July 22nd. Note the Shoemaker-Levy 9–like splash ring.

The Hubble Space Telescope team suspended its shakedown and calibration of the recently rebuilt telescope and rushed the new Wide Field Camera 3 into service to image the impact mark. Read all about it, and view more Hubble images.

July 27. More than a week after the impact the mark is still quite visible in small amateur scopes. From Victoria, British Columbia, S&T's Gary Seronik writes:

"I saw the impact clearly with my modified StarBlast reflector [on the night of July 27th]. So yes, it can be seen in a fast 4.5-inch scope. The spot looked like a misplaced, slightly diffuse shadow transit. In the best moments of steady seeing, the impact was quite easy to see." However, he notes, its high latitude on Jupiter means that it spends only a short time in from the planet's limb, "so you really have a window of opportunity that is perhaps as short as 15 minutes. After that, it gets tough — at least for a 4.5-inch scope."

July 29. The situation keeps developing; the mark is elongating into a big, diagonal gash. See Fabio Carvalho's images from this morning.

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First comments (from 23)

Impact Scar?

Posted by Ed July 20, 2009 At 01:20 PM PDT
Minor nitpick: In the second to last paragraph, it says, "If it's really the black debris from an impact star" I think you mean impact scar.


drmuey impact crater of love

Posted by Dan July 21, 2009 At 06:18 AM PDT
Sweet, the solar system gave my wife and I a present on our 10th wedding anniversary. I dub it the 'drmuey impact crater of love' for you, super wife!


Impact

Posted by David Scherk July 21, 2009 At 11:58 PM PDT
Good thing we saw this coming...oops! An amateur noticed it happenstance. I guess that's what happens when we don't look skyward enough. All those disaster movies and still humanity thinks it's invincible.


impact on Jupiter

Posted by Claudio Martinez July 22, 2009 At 12:22 AM PDT
Sorry but my English is not good. I was looking at Christopher Go´ photos, and I believe that the collision appears in their photos from the June 27, 2009. Their site is: http://jupiter.cstoneind.com/ Regards from Argentina


Wesley observation

Posted by Ken Schneider July 22, 2009 At 10:14 AM PDT
This is a perfect example of the terrific work being done by so many amateurs that has an actual effect on professional astronomy (and more). Congrats, and thanks, to Mr. Wesley for his fine work!


Impact Import

Posted by Peter Wilson July 22, 2009 At 04:46 PM PDT
Dark matter; dark energy; dark impacts...what's next?


Sudden and Unexpected

Posted by Stephen M. St. John July 23, 2009 At 12:28 PM PDT
Isn't it odd that a comet or meteor large enough to cause such an impact on Jupiter would go unnoticed by the sky watcher community?


Does it matter?

Posted by Mike July 24, 2009 At 09:08 AM PDT
Stephen, I don't think it's odd we didn't notice a comet or meteor that wasn't a threat to us.


Re: Does it matter?

Posted by Miguel July 24, 2009 At 10:16 AM PDT
The community "didn't notice" it **at all** prior to impact. If one "didn't notice" it, how would one know it was *not* a threat? M


Jupiter Impact

Posted by Jerry McMurry July 25, 2009 At 09:38 AM PDT
I went to Christoper Go's website and viewed his beautiful collection of images of Jupiter, but I cannot see any evidence of the impact on June 27 as Claudio Martinez claims. Claudio, can you clarify what you meant? I do appreciate your calling attention to Christopher Go's site though; it's great!




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