بلغات أخرى
- الألمانيّة: Halleyscher Komet
- الإنجليزيّة: Halley's Comet
- الإسبانيّة: El Cometa Halley
- الفرنسيّة: La comète de Halley
- الإيطاليّة: La cometa di Halley
- اليابانيّة: ハレー彗星 (رابط خارجي)
- البرتغاليّة البرازيليّة: Cometa Halley
- الصينيّة المبسطة: 哈雷彗星
- الصينيّة التقليدية: 哈雷彗星
وسائط ذات صلة
Halley's Comet
الشرح: Halley’s Comet, is a well-known periodic comet, named after the English astronomer Edmond Halley. It has an orbital period of approximately 75 years and is visible from Earth with the naked eye when it passes through the inner solar system.
The image shows Halley’s Comet, officially designated 1P/Halley, with a tail of gas and dust streaming away from the Sun. It was taken from the La-Silla-Observatory in Chile in 1986 during Halley's Comet's last visit to the inner solar system. The stars in this image appear elongated or as lines of three different colored dots as image was created from three separate observations in different colors of light and the telescope was tracking the comet, which was moving very slightly compared to the background stars. Note that the comets tail does not point in exactly the same direction as the elongation of the stars. This shows us that the comet tail is not always behind the comet, but instead pointing away from the Sun.
The comet passes its perihelion (closest distance to the Sun) at a distance of around 0.59 astronomical units, right between the orbits of Mercury and Venus. Beyond Neptune, it reaches its aphelion (furthest distance from the Sun) at a distance of approximately 35 astronomical units. Halley's Comet reached aphelion in December 2023 and is now moving inwards again. It is expected to be seen with the naked eye from Earth again in mid-2061.
المصدر: ESO
رابط المصدر
License: CC-BY-4.0 المشاع الإبداعي نَسب المُصنَّف 4.0 دولي (CC BY 4.0) أيقونات



