2014 Meteor Superstorms Are Expected Huge Comets Target Earth and Mars WTH! Is Going On?
Theories on the structure of comets suggest that any comet could fragment at any time,
So it is worth keeping an eye on some of 2014 comets, which have the best chance of reaching naked-eye visibility.
Comets that may bring real doom or are otherwise unusual.
Comet Holmes
(Perihelion Mar 27, 2014)
Over the course of 42 hours in October of 2007, Comet Holmes (17P/Holmes) became a half million times brighter on its way to becoming the largest object in the solar system – larger than the Sun, or Brad Pitt’s ego, if only for a brief time. Holmes is one of the more prominent comets in 2014.
http://www.fallofathousandsuns.com/comet-holmes.html
http://starrymirror.com/cometholmesquickfacts.htm
Image credit: NASA – Comet Holmes (17P/Holmes)
Comet 209P / LINEAR
(May 6, 2014)
Forget comet ISON, comet 209P/LINEAR brings real doom!!
comet Ison is nothing. The real thing is a comet after Ison in May 2014 (Comet 209P) which will bring some friends with it towards earth, in other words – doomsday http://arxiv.org/abs/1311.0235
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/209P/LINEAR
Comet Faye
(May 29, 2014)
Orbital Period of Comet Faye
The orbital period of Comet Faye is 7.55 years.
Comet Faye (4P/Faye) was discovered in 1844 by a French astronomer. It was the first periodic comet to be named after its discoverer and not the individual who determined its orbit. This comet will reach perihelion a couple days after Comet Holmes in 2014. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/4P/Faye
Comet Siding Spring
Perihelion Oct 25, 2014
Estimates for the diameter of the nucleus have varied from 1 to 50 km (0,62 to 31 mi). The resulting upper limit energy of impact could reach 20 billion megatons
For reference, the atomic bomb dropped on Nagasaki, Japan at the end of World War II was 0.023 megatons and the 1908 airburst over the Tunguska River in Siberia was 4.0 megatons
If the comet does hit Mars, the effect on our neighboring planet will be monumental and it would mark the second time in recorded history that a comet has been observed hitting a planet. The first, and only known observation, was the impact of Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 on Jupiter in 1994.
Based on Leonid Elenin’s recent observations, Comet Siding Spring will pass 0.000276 AU (41,300 km, 25,700 miles) from the surface of Mars on October 19, 2014.
For comparison, the average distance between the Earth and Moon is .00257 AU (384,400 km, 238,900 miles).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C/2013_A1
Image credit: NASA/JPL