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Scientists Hoping to Spear a Comet

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Compiled from Times staff and wire service reports

Researchers in Arizona have designed a four-foot-long projectile that will be used to penetrate the icy surface of a comet’s nucleus and relay scientific data back to Earth.

The device, shaped like a golf tee, will be shot from an unmanned spacecraft traveling about 90 m.p.h. to penetrate the nucleus of a comet to a depth of about one meter, said University of Arizona astronomer William Boynton.

The instrument package would be carried by NASA’s Comet Fly-by mission in the early 1990s, if Congress approves funding for the project. The spacecraft tentatively is scheduled for launch in 1992 or 1993. It would rendezvous with a comet called Temple II near Jupiter’s orbit, about 400 million miles from Earth.

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The information relayed back could help scientists understand how comets and the solar system were formed, they said.

Boynton said a model of the comet penetrator was tested by dropping it from the top of the university’s football stadium into a 55-gallon barrel of ice. That was “a lot of fun,” he said.

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