By

Mike Wall /

Space.com/ October 14, 2011, 12:51 PM

"Doomsday" comet to swing by Earth on Sunday

Trajectory of comet Elenin

Trajectory of comet Elenin / NASA/JPL-Caltech

The moment long feared by conspiracy theorists is nearly upon us: The "doomsday comet" Elenin will make its closest approach to Earth Sunday (Oct. 16). Or what's left of it will, anyway.

Comet Elenin started breaking up in August after being blasted by a huge solar storm, and a close pass by the sun on Sept. 10 apparently finished it off, astronomers say. So what will cruise within 22 million miles (35.4 million kilometers) of our planet Sunday is likely to be a stream of debris rather than a completely intact comet.

And the leftovers of Elenin won't return for 12,000 years, astronomers say.

"Folks are having trouble finding it, so I think it's probably dead and gone," said astronomer Don Yeomans of the Near-Earth Object Program Office at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif.

That means it probably won't present much of a skywatching show Sunday, scientists have said.

The doomsday comet

Elenin's apparent demise may come as a relief to some folks, since apocalyptic rumors circulating on the Internet portrayed the comet as a major threat to Earth.

One theory claimed Elenin would set off havoc on Earth after aligning with other heavenly bodies, spurring massive earthquakes and tsunamis. Another held that Elenin was not a comet at all, but in fact a rogue planet called Nibiru that would bring about the end times on Earth. After all, the comet's name could be taken as a spooky acronym: "Extinction-Level Event: Nibiru Is Nigh."

Those ideas were pure nonsense, Yeomans said.

"Elenin was a second-rate, wimpy little comet that never should have been noted for anything, really," he told SPACE.com. "It was not even a bright one."

Two images of comet Elenin taken on Aug. 19 (left) and Sept. 6, 2011. The images show a rapid dimming in the comet

/ Michael Mattiazzo/Space.com

Elenin's remains will not be the only objects about to make their closest pass of Earth. One day after the Elenin flyby, the small asteroid 2009 TM8 will zip close by. Like Elenin, it poses no risk of striking our home planet.

Asteroid 2009 TM8 is about 21 feet (6.4 meters) wide and the size of a schoolbus. It will come within 212,000 miles of Earth  -  just inside the orbit of the moon  -  when it zips by on Monday morning (Oct. 17).

Say goodbye to Elenin

Elenin was named after its discoverer, Russian amateur astronomer Leonid Elenin, who spotted it in December 2010. Before the icy wanderer broke up, its nucleus was likely 2 to 3 miles (3 to 5 km) in diameter, scientists say.

Elenin never posed any threat to life on Earth, Yeomans said. It was far too small to exert any appreciable influence on our planet unless it managed to hit us.

"Just driving to work every day in my subcompact car is going to have far more of a gravitational effect on Earth than this comet ever will," Yeomans said.

Elenin's supposed connection to earthquakes was just a correlation, and a weak one at that, he added. Relatively strong earthquakes occur every day somewhere on Earth, so it's easy -- but not statistically valid -- to blame some of them on the comet's changing position.

Yeomans views the frenzy over Elenin as a product of the Internet age, which allows loud and often uninformed voices to drown out the rather more prosaic results that scientists publish in peer-reviewed journals.

"It's a snowball effect on the Web," Yeomans said. "You get one or two folks who make an outrageous claim, and a bunch of others pile on. Some folks are actually making a living this way."

Elenin's crumbs will soon leave Earth in the rear-view mirror, speeding out on a long journey to the outer solar system. But Yeomans doesn't think the departure will keep the conspiracy theorists down for long.

"It's time to move on to the next armageddon," he said.

Best Close Encounters of the Comet Kind
Killer Asteroids: We're WISE to You Now!
Comet Elenin: Biggest Questions (and Answers) From NASA
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44 Comments Add a Comment
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amerilatino says:
BRING IT ON, BRING IT ON, BRING IT ON. The only thing I would wish for is to be able to grab one of the many evil, self-serving S.O.B.s I've dealt with in my life by the hair and force him to watch the oncoming comet as he screams in abject terror and I laugh like a madman in his ear, just before it hits.
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Argento-28 says:
It breaks my heart to see the economy crisis going system wide, when even a doomsday comet can loose its job.
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edwin_schrodinger says:
Scoff if you will, but I'll be safe in my underground fortress while the rest of you perish.
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gbgentleman says:
The space aliens turned on the cloaking device....
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anOPINIONATEDsob says:
S....TI..LL H...ERE
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MOBILESPECS says:
i wanna live
http://mobilespecs.in
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thomasmc1957 says:
We're all gonna die!
Not.
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myoleman says:
As the book of Revelation says, one day we will see huge objects coming from space striking the Earth and eliminating life as we now know it. It will start suddenly. Only those who trusted in Lord Jesus will be saved from eternal doom.
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Anotheryahoo replies:
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Thats sweet but wouldnt it be smart to just device a system to identify real threats and a way to steer them off course? Then you would have to think for yourself instead of being stuck in religions box of I cant think for myself therefor must let others from thousands of years ago tell me how and what to think. God gave you a brain try using it. Think different.
thomasmc1957 replies:
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No it doesn't. Apparently you haven't even READ the Book of Revelation.
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MagnaCartaUK says:
Still, it makes you wonder if sizeable chunks remain. Meteor shower?
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I_remember_when says:
I remember when man would look in the sky, and wonder what was that bright yellow streak?

I remember when man would see a deep red sun that turned the day into night, and be scared.

I remember when man felt thunder beneath their feet and fire coming out of the ground, and he thought he was being punished for being evil.

I remember when man would look at the night sky and see lightning far away - and thought fire bolts were being thrown at them because they didn't obey their god.

I remember when man thought he was so important in the universe, that when he saw a comet or an eclipse, or felt an earthquake or saw lightning... he was selfish to think it was all for him. I remember when man thought everything in the world happened FOR him, and he smugly reveled in his egocentrism.

I see that yesterday is still today, and most men still think this way.

True worldwide education still has far to go.

Thank Dog we have a few good teachers on the planet.
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I_remember_when replies:
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Woops, I meant "thank Good we have a few good teachers..."
I_remember_when replies:
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Sorry again, damn it. It should've said "Thank GOD!" (uh oh, I think I made him mad that time... or her? God, I hate making women angry!)
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