Predicting the Next Bright Comet

This weekend NASA's Deep Impact probe will make its much-anticipated crash into the Comet Tempel 1.  Impact of the probe's 800-pound copper projectile is now set to happen around 10:52 p.m. Pacific Daylight Time July 3rd (1:52 a.m. Eastern Daylight Time on the morning of July 4).

The projectile should blast a crater ranging anywhere from the size of a large house to the size of a stadium into the comet's icy nucleus, while instruments aboard the main spacecraft watch from a safe distance.  The collision is expected to accentuate somewhat Comet Tempel's brightness, perhaps making this usually dim and difficult-to-see object a relatively easy target for users of small telescopes and binoculars.  There is even a slight chance that the comet might reach naked eye visibility.

But even if this comes to pass, Comet Tempel will probably be just barely visible and even then, only from pristinely clear and dark skies. Certainly it will not come anywhere close to approaching the eye-catching spectacle that Comet Hale-Bopp provided back in 1997. 

Handicaping our next bright comet

The interest in comets generated by Deep Impact likely will cause some to wonder if another similarly bright comet like a Hale-Bopp looms on the horizon in the foreseeable future.

The answer is "yes, there probably is." 

Unfortunately, there is no way to exactly predict in advance when another spectacularly bright comet will appear.  As I write these words, there are no fewer than 16 comets that are currently under scrutiny by amateur and professional astronomers.  But the average brightness of these 16 comets is just around 12th magnitude -- or roughly 250 times dimmer than the faintest star that can be seen without any optical aid.  That's well out of the reach of most casual observers.

But every once in a while, a newly discovered comet will appear in our sky that is so spectacular that it captures the attention of a worldwide audience.  Certainly, Hale-Bopp fell into that category.  When it was at its brightest, in early April of 1997, this comet was readily visible even from light-polluted cities.  It was later estimated that the number of Americans who witnessed Hale-Bopp surpassed those who watched the 1997 Super Bowl!

The caste of comets

There are two varieties of comets.

"Common comets," are those that are only visible with optical aid or dimly with the unaided eye.  The vast majority of the periodic comets -- whose orbits are well known and have been observed on more than one occasion -- fall into this category.  These comets quietly come and go and are known only to enthusiastic amateur astronomers who make a concerted effort to hunt them down with good binoculars or telescopes against the faint background stars.  They are generally unimpressive, appearing as nothing more than faint fuzz balls, even in large telescopes.

Then, there are the "Great Comets." 

If you somehow managed to miss-out on seeing Hale-Bopp eight years ago, or have only now just gotten started in the hobby of astronomy, then you've never seen a Great Comet.  Such magnificent spectacles as these are set apart from all the other comets that are visible in a given year as being stupendously bright and/or fantastically structured, perhaps developing a tail that stretches a third of the way or more across the sky.  Such a comet can rival the brightest stars and planets in brightness.  And in very rare cases, a Great Comet might become so bright that it becomes briefly visible during the daytime either telescopically or even with the unaided eye!

Right now, somewhere out there in the depths of space, a Great Comet is approaching the Sun.  Unfortunately, we can have no advance knowledge of when it will appear until it is discovered on the inbound leg of its solar journey.  Most of the dim periodic comets travel in small elliptical orbits and regularly return to the Sun's vicinity at intervals of generally a dozen years or less.  But Great Comets swing out far beyond the orbit of Pluto and usually require many hundreds ... or even thousands of years between visits to the Sun. 

Anatomy of a comet

It has been said that a comet is the closest thing to nothing that anything can be, and still be something.  Today we know them to be composed of frozen gases that are heated as they approach the Sun and are made to glow by the Sun's light. The only solid portion of a comet is a condensed, sometimes starlike point at the center of the comet's head or coma, known as the nucleus.  It has been popularly referred to as a "dirty snowball," although its size would easily rival that of an iceberg.  Most comet nuclei are probably no more than a few miles across.  On the other hand, the nucleus of Comet Hale-Bopp was estimated to be far larger than most: perhaps on the order of 25 miles or more in diameter.  As the frozen gases warm and expand, the solar wind -- a stream of subatomic particles rushing out from the Sun -- blows the expanding material out from the coma, into the comet's beautiful tail.  To observers of antiquity, the tail resembled a head of long hair, so they called comets "hairy stars." 

The unpredictability of how bright a comet might become is no surprise to those who study these enigmatic objects.  What we'll ultimately see depends on a number of variables -- the comet's orbit, the relative locations of the comet, Earth and Sun, and of course the size and composition of that icy clumping of solar system debris that forms the comet's nucleus. Astronomers have developed general formulas and models for comet brightnesses based on the observed behavior of many comets since the late 19th century, but comets, like people, have their individual quirks.

Judging the future by the past

So when will another bright comet come our way?  Perhaps we can try to answer that question using the law of averages.  In the table below, I've listed all of the comets that appeared during the 20th century, which attained a brightness of at least second magnitude (as bright as Polaris, the North Star).  Two chief sources of reference were "The Bright Comet Chronicles" compiled by the noted comet observer, John E. Bortle (http://encke.jpl.nasa.gov/bright_comet.html) and "Comets -- A Descriptive Catalog" by Gary W. Kronk (1984, Enslow Publishers, Inc., Hillside, NJ). 

The first column gives the year of appearance and the name of the comet.  The maximum number of names that can be assigned to a comet is three.  In some cases, however, the comet is so bright when it is first seen, and initially reported by so many people that it becomes known by a generic name (For example, "Great January Comet").  If the listing is in bold type, then the object was generally considered to be a "Great" comet.

The second column provides the date when the comet appeared at its brightest, along with its magnitude.  Usually, though, the comet was visible for some days -- or even weeks -- before or after the date given.

The third column provides some short remarks of interest about the comet.  In two cases, for instance, a reference is made to "Kreutz sungrazer" indicating that the comet is a member of the Kreutz group of comets, characterized by orbits which take them to within just a few hundred thousand miles of the Sun. They are all believed to originate from the fragmentation of one very large comet several centuries ago, and are named for the astronomer Heinrich Kreutz, who first demonstrated that they were related.

Bright comets of the 20th Century

Swipe to scroll horizontally

Year/Name

Brightest date / Mag.

Remarks

1901 Viscara

May 2 / -1.5

Yellowish; may have split in two

1907 Daniel

August 15 / +2.0

Photographed more than any comet before it.

1910 Great January Comet

January 17 / -5.0

Visible in daylight; "Like Venus with a 10? tail."

1910 Halley

May 20 / 0.0

Tail stretched 120? across the sky!

1911 Beljawsky

October 15 / +1.0

Golden yellow; simultaneously visible with Comet Brooks.

1911 Brooks

October 28 / +2.0

Distinct bluish tinge. Visible with Beljawsky from Oct. 10-22.

1927 Skjellerup-Maristany

December 18 / -6.0

Visible in daylight; faded rapidly thereafter.

1941 De Kock-

         Paraskevopoulos

January 30 / +2.0

Visible only from Southern Hemisphere

1947 Great Southern Comet

December 7 / 0.0

Orange with 25? tail; faded rapidly

1948 Eclipse Comet

November 1 / -2.0

Discovered next to the Sun during a total solar eclipse.

1957 Arend-Roland

April 21 / 0.0

Displayed sunward pointing "anti-tail" Apr. 20-May 3

1957 Mrkos

August 1 / +1.0

Visible both in evening & morning sky.

1962 Seki-Lines

April 3 / -2.5

Extremely bright; faded quickly.

1965 Ikeya-Seki

October 21 / >-15!

Brightest of 20th century; Kreutz sungrazer, visible in daylight. Split into 3 pieces.

1970 Bennett

March 19 / 0.0

"Stunning" Exhibited spiraling jets of gas in head.

1970 White-Ortiz-Bolelli

May 18 / +1.0

Kreutz sungrazer; faded rapidly.

1973 Kohoutek

December 28 / -3.0

Spectacular as seen from Skylab, but then faded very rapidly; big disappointment!

1976 West

February 25 / -3.0

Glimpsed in daylight; split into 4 pieces; had 5 tails!

1983 IRAS-Iraki-Alcock

May 12 / +1.6

Passed within 2.9 million miles of Earth.

1996 Hyakutake

March 27 / 0.0

Displayed "immense" tail; 70 to perhaps 100? long.

1997 Hale-Bopp

April 1 / -0.5

Visible to unaided eye from July 1996 thru Oct. 1997, an all-time record.

During the last century 21 bright comets appeared.  That's an average of one about every 4.8 years. 

Of course, as you can surmise from the table, they didn't appear precisely at 4.8-year intervals.  In fact, during October 1911, it was possible to see two of these comets in the sky at the same time!  On the other hand, there was as much as 14-year wait between the bright comets of 1927 and 1941.

And some of these comets were at their best chiefly for those living in the Southern Hemisphere, as was the case in 1941, 1947 and 1948; northern observers saw little or nothing.  Because of this, there were no really fine and bright comets available from the Northern Hemisphere for more than four decades (1911 through 1957).  Sometimes, unfortunately, that's the way it goes with comets.

How frequent?

Statistically, we can state with some confidence that a comet as bright as second magnitude can be expected on an average of about once every 4 to 12 years. 

For a comet at least as bright as zero magnitude (equal to the stars Capella or Vega), the wait might end up being about twice as long -- perhaps running 8 to as much as 24 years in length. 

And for a comet that attains an extreme brilliance of at least minus 3 magnitude or brighter (approaching/exceeding Venus in brightness), it could be even longer; for such dazzlers, we might have to wait roughly 25 to 50 years between appearances.   

The last bright naked-eye comet was Hale-Bopp, in 1997.  The last truly dazzling comet, even visible briefly in broad daylight, was Comet West back in 1976 -- nearly 30 years ago.  So, according to the law of averages, we could be about due for another similarly spectacular comet.  Indeed, just such an interplanetary vagabond could burst onto the celestial stage literally at anytime. 

Wait till next year?

Certainly, we're overdue for a comet at least as bright as second magnitude, and interestingly, we might just have such a comet available to us next spring. 

Back in December 1995, the periodic comet Schwassmann-Wachmann-3, which travels in a 5.3-year orbit around the Sun, unexpectedly fragmented into several pieces, expelling massive amounts of dust into space and making this comet appear much brighter than normal. 

The largest fragment ("C") is predicted to skim just 6.8 million miles from the Earth on May 13 of next year. Sky watchers during that week will hopefully be able to see this comet race rapidly through the constellations Cygnus, Pegasus and Pisces.  According to Japanese comet expert, Seiichi Yoshida, Schwassmann-Wachmann-3 could possibly brighten up to become second magnitude as it passes Earth, which would make it the brightest comet to appear in our skies in nine years. 

Notice, however, that I used the word "hopefully" since there is a major unknown: since Schwassmann-Wachmann-3 is apparently in the process of disintegrating, does this comet and its accompanying smaller fragments still exist?  We'll just have to wait and see.

Capricious comets

Sometimes, even comets that become very bright can still end up being disappointing. Take Comet Kohoutek, which during most of 1973 was widely touted as potentially "The Comet of the Century" as it approached the Sun.  It reached its peak that year a few days after Christmas.  For the crew of Skylab III, Kohoutek was described by astronaut Edward Gibson as "... a very elegant and impressive sight" as it rounded the Sun.  Less than a week later, however, the comet had unexpectedly diminished to a fraction of its former brilliance, and many, who eagerly looked for it, especially from light-polluted cities, saw nothing. 

In stark contrast, just a couple of years later, when Comet West swept past the Sun, it far exceeded all brightness forecasts.  It rapidly developed into a glorious predawn spectacle, but ironically, was mostly ignored by the same news media that was "burned" by the poor performance of Kohoutek, and hence was mostly missed by the general public.

If there's a moral here, perhaps we should end this discussion on potentially bright comets with a quote from the legendary comet expert Fred L. Whipple (1906-2004):

"If you must bet, bet on a horse, not a comet!"

Basic Sky Guides

  • Full Moon Fever
  • Astrophotography 101
  • Sky Calendar & Moon Phases
  • 10 Steps to Rewarding Stargazing
  • Understanding the Ecliptic and the Zodiac
  • False Dawn: All about the Zodiacal Light
  • Reading Weather in the Sun, Moon and Stars
  • How and Why the Night Sky Changes with the Seasons
  • Night Sky Main Page: More Skywatching News & Features

Joe Rao serves as an instructor and guest lecturer at New York's Hayden Planetarium. He writes about astronomy for The New York Times and other publications, and he is also an on-camera meteorologist for News 12 Westchester, New York.

Join our Space Forums to keep talking space on the latest missions, night sky and more! And if you have a news tip, correction or comment, let us know at: community@space.com.

Joe Rao
Skywatching Columnist

Joe Rao is Space.com's skywatching columnist, as well as a veteran meteorologist and eclipse chaser who also serves as an instructor and guest lecturer at New York's Hayden Planetarium. He writes about astronomy for Natural History magazine, the Farmers' Almanac and other publications. Joe is an 8-time Emmy-nominated meteorologist who served the Putnam Valley region of New York for over 21 years. You can find him on Twitter and YouTube tracking lunar and solar eclipses, meteor showers and more. To find out Joe's latest project, visit him on Twitter.