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Time-Variability of the Interplanetary Complex
by
Mark E. Bailey
Armagh Observatory, College Hill, Armagh, BT61 9DG, Northern Ireland, UK
A significant number of distant cometary nuclei have diameters in excess
of 100 km and dynamical lifetimes for transfer from source orbits extending
to the Edgeworth-Kuiper belt or Oort cloud on the order of 1 million years.
These "giant" comets are injected into the inner solar system with a frequency
comparable to that between the civilization destroying impacts of kilmetre-sized
near-Earth asteroids. Once inserted onto short-period inner solar system orbits,
giant comets survive dynamically for roughly ten thousand years, suggesting that
giant-comet debris could have been present in the inner solar system within the
past 10 to 100 thousand years. The talk will review review the astronomical
evidence for giant comets and their expected frequency of injection into the
inner solar system.
Date received: March 7, 2002
Copyright © 2002 by the author(s). The author(s) of this document and the organizers of the conference have granted their consent to include this abstract in Atlas Conferences Inc. Document # caiq-65.