Comet Research Group

FWIW, Martin Armstrong presumably using his Socrates software stated the following about the Deep State; - Source

I seriously doubt that any president can defeat the Deep State. It will take the army to rise up to defend the people. The CIA was created in 1947, and they succeeded in ensuring that Trump would lose. The entire COVID response has been supported by the Deep State, which was 72 years from 1947. Even in Canada, the military has used the pandemic to test physiological warfare on its own citizens. These people are drunk on their own power.

This will come to an end, crashing down in the face by 2033. The politicians are not in charge anymore.

Wonder if it's related to comet Bernardinelli-Bernstein mega comet closest approach around 2031? :huh:

An article at Astronomy.com about a comet swarm states the following;

....David Asher, an astronomer at the Armagh Observatory in Northern Ireland, says the latest work is “helping to build the picture of the original Taurid [forefather] presently having lots of debris in the inner planetary system.” Together with Kiyoshi Izumi from the Nippon Meteor Society in Japan, he has predicted two years in the next decade when we are likely to pass near the center of the complex: 2032 and 2036. (Mark your calendars.)
 
This will come to an end, crashing down in the face by 2033. The politicians are not in charge anymore.

I can't see the current system lasting for another 12 years. They have screwed up the global economy in a big way. There's a lag, but those chicken will soon come home to roost.
 
I can't even feel it will last more than a few months, all the pots are starting to boil (In figurative sense) and its matter of time it will be a mess.
Indeed, if it were a local thing then one could say that probably it would have taken longer for the global system to come crashing down due to some X factor but since they've plunged the entire world in this covid business for the last 18 months you can imagine the damage that has been done to the system globally because of their deliberate and irresponsible mishandling of the situation.

You can add to that the increasing earth changes each passing day, the ongoing increasing oppression from the PTB globally and as Joe said soon, very soon probably the chicken will come home to roost. 6-10 months? Wait and see. ;-D
 
Thanks for the website link. I'm currently looking at applying to graduate schools to study more on comets. Specifically, whether it would be possible to conduct a test in a laboratory on the idea that comets are asteroids interacting with plasma. The list of scientists on this website can prove useful, as many professors do not seem interested in comets at all!
 
Hi,

We´ve got a new topic on hr.sott for Comets and Catastrophes series and, in the light of the general global situation, the plan is to re-run the series in order.

So far, I collected CACS articles below.

What would be the best reading/re-publishing order of the articles (except for obvious CCS parts)?

I listed below the dates of the articles as they are now on SOTT; so is this correct order?

I´m confused with the release/order dates because i.e. 30 Jun 2012 - Tunguska, Psychopathy and the Sixth Extinction is on German SOTT dated 30 Jun 2008.


10 Jan 2007 - Fire and Ice: The Day After Tomorrow
14 Mar 2007 - Climate Change Swindlers and the Political Agenda
20 Mar 2007 - Forget About Global Warming: We're One Step From Extinction!
19 Dec 2007 - Book Review: New Light on the Black Death by Mike Baillie - 1.part
07 Jan 2008 - The Hazard to Civilization From Fireballs and Comets - 2.part
08 Jan 2008 - Cosmic Turkey Shoot - 3.part
15 Jan 2008 - Wars, Pestilence and Witches - 4.part
28 Jan 2008 - Thirty Years of Cults and Comets - 5.part
03 Feb 2008 - Comet Biela and Mrs. O'Leary's Cow - 6.part
12 Feb 2008 - Tunguska, the Horns of the Moon and Evolution - 7.part
14 Mar 2008 - Letters From the Edge - 8.part
27 Mar 2008 - Meteorites, Asteroids, and Comets: Damages, Disasters, Injuries, Deaths, and Very Close Calls - 9.part
18 Apr 2008 - Impact Hazards on a Populated Earth?
30 Oct 2010 - Witches comets and planetary cataclysms - not in the SOTT series I believe it belongs to it
14 Apr 2011 - The Golden Age, Psychopathy and the Sixth Extinction - not in the SOTT series I believe it belongs to it
07 May 2011 - New Light on the Black Death: The Viral and Cosmic Connection - not in the SOTT series I believe it belongs to it
30 Jun 2012 - Tunguska, Psychopathy and the Sixth Extinction - not in the SOTT series I believe it belongs to it
27 Jan 2013 - On viral 'junk' DNA, a DNA-enhancing Ketogenic diet, and cometary kicks - not in the SOTT series I believe it belongs to it
20 Sep 2021 - Ancient Tunguska sized airburst demolished city in Jordan Valley
20 Sep 2021 - Study confirms that it was a giant meteorite impact that caused massive extinction in the late Cretaceous
18 Oct 2021 - The Hopewell Airburst Event
 
Just when the world is enraptured with deep space images from the James Webb Space Telescope, a comet from the Kreutz family made its plunge into the sun and the moment was captured by NASA satellites.


As is common in these sun diving comet events we see a small Coronal Mass Ejection.


This morning I was struck by the tweets of Dr. Karl Battams. I thought it would be interesting to include this information in this thread.

He posts a graph of the increase in observations of these sun diving comets. He mentions that the Kreutz family group of comets dominates with 85% of the observations, while observations of comets of the "mysterious" Meyer group represent 7%.

The mysterious comets of the Meyer family are very faint and difficult to capture from the ground.


Background: What are Meyer-group Comets?​

The Meyer-group is a populous family of sunskirting comets, first recognized by amateur astronomer Maik Meyer (Germany) in 2002. To date, the group contains about 300 known members, making it the most abundant known family of comets after the Kreutz-group. However, contrary to the Kreutz-group, Meyer-group comets have solely been observed in SOHO/LASCO data. There are no recorded ground based observations of any Meyer-group members. In addition, none have ever been recovered in STEREO/SECCHI images, including the brightest members. This is likely due to their intrinsically faint nature, and the photometric properties of the STEREO/SECCHI instruments. Consequently, the lack of observations (e.g. short observation arc) make it difficult to constrain any orbits with high certainty. In fact, data lacks in order to establish (or estimate) reliable orbital periods. It is thought however that Meyer-group comets are likely intermediate or long periodic comets (Battams and Knight, 2015, and references therein). Interestingly, Rainer Kracht suggested the possibility of a ~10 year orbital period, although this was never confirmed.
Meyer_comet_composite_image
Figure 1: Composite SOHO/LASCO C2 image extracts showing nine different Meyer-group comets. Notice their stellar and/or elongated morphology. The orientation of the elongation depends on the time of the year (i.e. viewing geometry). Image credit: ESA/NASA SOHO/LASCO C2.
In regards to their appearance, Meyer-group comets all share a very common morphology. Nearly all Meyer-group comets are very condensed in appearance, although generally slightly elongated as seen in SOHO/LASCO C2. Their condensed appearance suggests that they are relatively “inactive” in nature (Battams and Knight, 2015). A composite image of various “typical” Meyer-group members is shown in Figure 1. Indeed, other than their varying brightness, their morphologies are strikingly similar. For comparison, Kreutz-group comets are generally somewhat fuzzy, (although highly condensed members have been observed, e.g. SOHO-3847). Marsden and Kracht comets also tend display “stellar” morphologies. Unlike the Kreutz, Marsden, Kracht-I and Kracht-II groups, that appear to be dynamically evolving, the Meyer-group is most likely a highly evolved comet family (Lamy et al., 2013; Battams and Knight, 2015). Indeed, Battams and Knight (2015) suggest that the precursor of the Meyer-group may potential have first fragmented as long as ~10.000 years ago. Moreover, unlike the latter comet groups, Meyer comets rarely arrive in tight clusters. However, there have been exceptions: on November 4-5th, 2019, a group of three Meyer-group comets were seen over a span of only eight hours (Figure 2). Note that, in average, one Meyer-group comet is observed per month. This is the “tightest” known Meyer-group cluster discovered to date.
 
COMET WITH TWO TAILS: Something special is happening to Comet C/2017 K2 (PanSTARRS). It's about to plunge through Earth's orbital plane (a.k.a. the ecliptic). The passage is giving us a rare view of the comet's two tails:
cometk2_strip.jpg
Gerald Rhemann took the picture on Aug. 15th using a 12-inch telescope in Farm Tivoli, Namibia. It shows Comet K2's dust tail pointing left, and its gaseous ion tail pointing down almost 90 degrees away.

All comets have two tails. Think about the material vaporizing from a comet's nucleus. It's a mixture of gas and dust. Lightweight gas is blown straight away from the sun by solar wind. Heavier dust lags behind, more closely tracing the comet's orbit. Voilà--two tails. Playing with Comet K2's interactive 3D orbit reveals why the two tails are currently at right angles.

This beautiful geometry will persist for some time. The exact date that Comet K2 passes through the ecliptic plane is Aug. 25th, but it will remain close to the plane for weeks. SpaceWeather.com
 

Comet C/2023 A3 Could Be the Next Great Comet​


Earlier this year, shortly after the excitement of comet C/2022 E3, astronomers found another icy visitor grazing through their images. This comet, C/2023 A3 ( Tsuchinan-Atlas), was discovered independently by ATLAS in South Africa and Tsuchinsan Observatory in China - and given their namesake. But will this one be the great naked-eye comet of the decade we’ve been waiting for?

Currently , C/2023 A3 is very faint as it flies outside Jupiter’s orbit, but the fun will peak next year when it skims closely past the Earth and the Sun. Its perigee, or closest approach to Earth, will occur on October 12, 2024 placing the comet less than 0.5 Earth-Sun distances (AU) from our planet. Perihelion will occur shortly before, on September 27, 2024..

Interestingly, both of these points in the comet’s orbit will position it between the Earth and Sun. This "forward scattering event" may bolster the comet's brightness. In this case, sunlight coming from behind the comet, according to our perspective on Earth , is scattered off of dust particles in the comet’s coma towards our eyes . As a result, the comet could appear brighter than we would expect, but there is a caveat – its sandwiching between the Earth and the Sun means the best viewing will occur during the evening or morning instead of the darkness of night.

All in all, it is still too soon for us to know precisely what C/2023 A3 will do. Astronomers are still unsure of the comet’s size, which could determine whether it breaks apart during an outburst of sublimation or stays intact. The type of ices and their distribution in the comet’s nucleus can also affect how its brightness will change. However, with the help of Unistellar Citizen Astronomers, these unknowns aren't keeping SETI scientists from trying to predict how C/2023 A3 will act.

Predicting A Comet’s Brightness

Though the comet's close approach is still distant, the scientific community has already begun to place its bets. Various predictions have emerged, highlighting the dynamic nature of these cosmic travelers, with several placing the comet’s 2024 brightness to outshine the brightest stars. Other forecasts are more conservative, insinuating that the comet will be visible through binoculars, at best. Graykowski employed different models for the data gathered by the SETI Institute/Unistellar Network to better understand the range of possibilities.

Plot.-Credit-Ariel-Graykowski--Unistellar-web.jpg

 
This is also Comet Atlas C/2023 E1 ( ATLAS )Colorized using a color image. In the frame-reversed image with a diameter of about 10', a thin tail over 20' extends faintly in the south-southeast direction.2023/07/16 24:06:27 (JST) 16.629 (UT)ε-160ED+extender+BJ-53L 2m×14
Comet PanSTARRS C/2022 A2 ( PanSTARRS )Well condensed North 5' tail Bluish green 12th magnitude 2023/07/16 25:54:03 (JST) 16.704 (UT)Frame ε-160ED+extender+BJ-53L 2m×10Background FCT76+rd+EOS60Da 4m×5#cometcollection

103P/Hartley 2Central condensed, blue coma spreads, tail near 2' in southwest 14 mag, brightening 2023/07/16 25:19:09 (JST) 16.679 (UT)Frame ε-160ED+extender+BJ-53L 2m×10Background FCT76+rd+EOS60Da 4m×5

 
From Spaceweather.com:

"
A COMET EXPLODES AND SPROUTS 'HORNS':

A comet with horns? Believe it. On July 20th, something on the surface of Comet 12P/Pons-Brooks exploded, increasing its brightness 100-fold. Debris from the outburst looks like this:




"Here is a quick view of Comet 12P/Pons-Brooks taken last night between some high clouds," reports Thomas Wildoner of Weatherly, PA. "Just in the last several days, this comet has gone from a star-like appearance to brightening by five magnitudes and now sporting a coma in the shape of two horns."


Comet 12P/Pons-Brooks is famous for exploding. Discovered in 1812 by Pons and discovered again in 1883 by Brooks, the bursty comet visits the inner solar system every 71 years. Since the 19th century at least 7 significant outbursts have been observed, suggesting that it might be a cryovolcanic comet like 29P/Schwassmann-Wachmann.




The comet is currently beyond the orbit of Mars, but falling toward the sun for a close encounter in April 2024. At that time it is expected to become a naked-eye object at 4th or 5th magnitude. Given its history of outbursts, however, the moment of easy visibility could come sooner.


Amateur astronomers are encouraged to monitor developments. Comet 12P is currently crossing the head of Draco not far from the north celestial pole. With an astronomical magnitude of +11, it is an easy target for mid-sized backyard telescopes. Check out those horns! And submit your photos here."
 

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