So Long 2I/Borisov! First Interstellar Comet to Visit Our Solar System Spotted Falling Apart

© AP Photo / NASA, ESA, D. Jewitt (UCLA)This 12 October 2019 photo made available by NASA shows the comet 2I/Borisov, seen by the Hubble Space Telescope. It’s the second known interstellar visitor to swoop through our backyard. An amateur astronomer from Crimea, Gennady Borisov, discovered the comet in August, two years after the first alien guest, a cigar-shaped rock, popped up
This 12 October 2019 photo made available by NASA shows the comet 2I/Borisov, seen by the Hubble Space Telescope. It’s the second known interstellar visitor to swoop through our backyard. An amateur astronomer from Crimea, Gennady Borisov, discovered the comet in August, two years after the first alien guest, a cigar-shaped rock, popped up - Sputnik International
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Since 2I/Borisov comet, an interstellar object discovered last August by an amateur astronomer in Crimea, approached the Sun on 8 December 2019, scientists had been watching it closely to ascertain whether it will continue its way through the universe or meet the fate of some other space rocks and fall apart after meeting with our home star.

The first interstellar comet to visit our Solar System, 2I/Borisov, is breaking into pieces, the images from the Hubble Space Telescope analysed by a team of astronomers led by David Jewitt showed.

According to the researchers’ analysis published on the Astronomer’s Telegram, there is a significant difference between a set of images of the comet taken on 23 March and seven days later, on 30 March, which tend to show that the object has started breaking into pieces.

“Images from UT 2020 March 23 show a single inner brightness core, like that observed in all previous HST images of 2I/Borisov,” the astronomers noted.

Tweet: Comet 2I/Borisov, the first comet detected to come from outside the Solar System and discovered last year, reportedly began to split in two last week.

​“In contrast, images from UT 2020 on 30 March show a clearly non-stellar core, consistent with two unresolved components separated by 0.1 arcsecond (180 km at the distance of the comet) and aligned with the main axis of the larger dust coma,” the team explained.

The comet, which was discovered in August 2019 by amateur astronomer Gennadiy Borisov and named after him, closely approached the Sun on 8 December 2019. Since then, scientists have been monitoring its behaviour, as it is common for comets to break apart after passing the perihelion, although not unavoidable.

Rendered image of 2 Pallas  - Sputnik International
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Earlier in March, another team of astronomers from Poland argued that they spotted a significant brightening of the comet, which they believed had indicated that the object was starting to decay.

It looks like there is not much hope left for 2I/Borisov to continue its way through the universe, as it was the second interstellar object and the first ever interstellar comet to enter our Solar System.

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