Abstract
On 4 July 2005, many observatories around the world and in space observed the
collision of Deep Impact with comet 9P/Tempel 1 or its aftermath. This was
an unprecedented coordinated observational campaign. These data show that
(i) there was new material after impact that was compositionally different
from that seen before impact; (ii) the ratio of dust mass to gas mass in the
ejecta was much larger than before impact; (iii) the new activity did not
last more than a few days, and by 9 July the comet's behavior was indistinguishable
from its pre-impact behavior; and (iv) there were interesting transient phenomena
that may be correlated with cratering physics.