WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:00.010 --> 00:00:04.060 Narrator: Every 2 00:00:04.060 --> 00:00:08.090 5.4 years. comet 41P swings around the Sun 3 00:00:08.090 --> 00:00:12.120 and puts on a show for observers on Earth. 4 00:00:12.120 --> 00:00:16.180 Between March and April 2017, as the comet made its closest approach 5 00:00:16.180 --> 00:00:20.210 to Earth, astronomers caught it doing something never before seen. 6 00:00:20.210 --> 00:00:24.260 41P is an icy body from the Kuiper Belt. 7 00:00:24.260 --> 00:00:28.340 the cold storage zone beyond Neptune. 8 00:00:28.340 --> 00:00:32.460 Neptune's gravity first sent it hurtling toward the sun, and Jupiter trapped 9 00:00:32.460 --> 00:00:36.660 it in its current orbit. As it nears the Sun, 10 00:00:36.660 --> 00:00:40.870 the comet's icy areas warm up and turn to gas. 11 00:00:40.870 --> 00:00:45.080 This forms jets that blast gas and dust into space. 12 00:00:45.080 --> 00:00:49.240 This material becomes an extended atmosphere around the comet and makes up its 13 00:00:49.240 --> 00:00:53.300 tail. To better understand how comets work, 14 00:00:53.300 --> 00:00:57.400 astronomers study how these jets change as a comet approaches and 15 00:00:57.400 --> 00:01:01.500 departs the inner solar system. From this, astronomers can measure 16 00:01:01.500 --> 00:01:05.590 how fast the comet rotates. 17 00:01:05.590 --> 00:01:09.680 When 41P approached, in March 2017, astronomers found 18 00:01:09.680 --> 00:01:13.750 it to be rotating about once every 20 hours. But when 19 00:01:13.750 --> 00:01:17.930 NASA's Swift studied the comet in May, 41P's rotation 20 00:01:17.930 --> 00:01:22.010 period had more than doubled. This is the largest, most 21 00:01:22.010 --> 00:01:26.180 abrupt rotational change ever seen on a comet. 22 00:01:26.180 --> 00:01:30.210 Comet 41P is a small object, smaller than most of the 23 00:01:30.210 --> 00:01:34.440 so-called Jupiter Family Comets, and very active. 24 00:01:34.440 --> 00:01:38.650 Astronomers think a particularly strong active area produced jets that 25 00:01:38.650 --> 00:01:42.730 lined up in just the right way to suddenly put the brakes on the comet's spin. 26 00:01:42.730 --> 00:01:46.840 Extrapolating from the Swift measurements, 27 00:01:46.840 --> 00:01:50.980 41P could have continued to slow in the following months. 28 00:01:50.980 --> 00:01:55.000 spinning less than once every four days by summer. 29 00:01:55.000 --> 00:01:59.060 This spin is too slow to keep the comet stable, so even 30 00:01:59.060 --> 00:02:03.140 small jets can set it wobbling like a top, or tumbling, 31 00:02:03.140 --> 00:02:07.340 and ultimately rotating around a different axis. 32 00:02:07.340 --> 00:02:11.540 Such changes affect which parts of the comet are exposed to sunlight. 33 00:02:11.540 --> 00:02:15.710 Perhaps, this will drive new levels of activity that will further change 34 00:02:15.710 --> 00:02:19.880 the comet's spin. Scientists have never before 35 00:02:19.880 --> 00:02:24.070 observed this phase of comet evolution, and they look forward to 36 00:02:24.070 --> 00:02:28.260 41P's next visit in 2022. 37 00:02:28.260 --> 00:02:32.310 38 00:02:32.310 --> 00:02:36.340 39 00:02:36.340 --> 00:02:40.400 [Beeping] 40 00:02:40.400 --> 00:02:42.997 [Beeping]