- Sun Apr 19, 2020 6:48 pm
#74945
Really appreciate all the clarification!
Jonathan Evans wrote:I have thoroughly read this thread and still have a few questions that I am not quite following. For one, you mention that to still have that reflectivity of 100, instead of it taking 10 kg of mass it would take 600 kg of mass to have this reflectivity... but we don't want the same reflectivity because Halley's comet reflects 60x less light per unit of mass? I am confused how you were able to extrapolate that we still want Halley's comet to have the same reflectivity. Knowing that is really helpful to understanding the stimulus but I don't see where you got that from.
Think about it this way: let's say Halley's comet has a reflectivity of "100." In the past, scientists estimated the mass of Halley's comet based on this reflectivity of 100. They supposed that a certain amount of mass, say 10 kg, would indicate a reflectivity of 100. However, now we've discovered that based on the composition of Halley's comet, it would take far more mass to have this same reflectivity of 100, say 600 kg instead (since the material that makes up Halley's comet is less reflective than predicted). Thus, Halley's comet must be larger than expected to have this same reflectivity of 100. Instead of taking only 10 kg to have a reflectivity of 100, based on the materials in Halley's comet, it would take 600 kg to have this reflectivity.
I hope this helps!
Really appreciate all the clarification!