12 January 2011

Comet Elenin is Coming!

One of the members of our research team is an astronomer at a large observatory. We've been having a number of exchanges about the theories of James McCanney. Unfortunately, I can't find any really good videos of McCanney talking about his ideas. I did find the following which are basically just audio with minimal graphics. They do explain his ideas so have a listen before you continue on. If anybody has links to better videos, please let me know!





Okay, now you know a bit about the possibilities of comets as parts of the Electric Solar System. McCanney cites all the strange weather on earth, strange behavior of the sun, that arrived in tandem with Comet Hale-Bopp. So now along comes Comet Elenin. Let's start with the likely trajectory. On the image, which came from my astronomer friend, it looks like this:

E – Earth

W - Venus

M – Mars

The little black curved line represents Mercury.

Hopefully, it should be visible somewhere around mid-August. Its closest approach to the Sun is scheduled in the first half of September. Where it will go exactly - we do not know. Since its orbit is close to the ecliptic plane, it should be visible low in the sky. Orbital parameters are yet uncertain. So far it looks harmless:

Comet elenin

© Leonid Elenin / ISON-NM © Leonid elenin / SpeedN-NM
Comet Elenin (C/2010 X1) appears as a tiny, faint smudge in this stack of four 240-second exposures taken on the morning of December 10, 2010, with a remote-controlled telescope in New Mexico. (The quadrupled stars are due to the comet's motion between exposures.)

It is called Elenin since it was discovered by Leonid Elenin. I expect the internet to soon be ringing with rumors and news bytes about this comet. For now, there isn't much to say so I'm sharing what I've received in private from an astronomer at a big observatory that shall remain anonymous for the moment. He says:

  1. It is too early to accurately predict the future path - it's orbital parameters haven't been revised.

  2. Among the observable hyperbolic and parabolic comets (those that come from the Oort cloud) this one has the smallest perihelion distance and the smallest inclination to the ecliptic plane.

  3. Comet Elenin's orbit may be unstable as it may encounter some dark bodies, for example, in the asteroid belt or even some Taurid objects. What would happen in those cases is a matter of luck.

  4. This comet may carry a significant amount of material with it and if it follows the currently projected orbit, the Earth may very well pass through this material.
  5. If Elenin is anything like what Victor Clube or James McCanney describes, we might be in for some surprises - good or bad, who knows?

    For comparison a picture with some of the known comets:




    For those interested : Ephemerides of the comet C/2010 X1 Elenin

Currently, according to Nasa the predicted trajectory can be viewed here

Predicted brightness:

Elenin - Brightness

Where to look:

elein

Interview with the discoverer ("Comets may represent a serious danger": )

« Кометы могут представлять серьезную угрозу »

Elenin

Elenin's telescope

Elenin's telescope

1 comments:

geocom69 said...

Many people are talking about Comet Elenin and it's alignments but they're only going to alignment 4. Go to are governments webpage http://ssd.jpl.nasa.gov/sbdb.cgi?sstr=c%2F2010+x1&orb=1 and track Comet Elenin to its fifth alignment. It's around December 21, 2012 coincidence?? I don't know! George H. Compton IV