Featured Post

Tracking air pollution disparities -- daily -- from space

Studies have shown that pollution, whether from factories or traffic-snarled roads, disproportionately affects communities where economicall...

Friday, January 17, 2020

Here and gone: Outbound comets are likely of extra-solar origin



Here and gone: outbound comets are likely of extra-solar origin

Conceptual diagram of this research. Researchers calculated the typical paths of long-orbit comets (blue) perturbed by a passing gas-giant-sized object (white) and objects of interstellar origin (red). Credit: NAOJ


Astronomers at the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan (NAOJ) have analyzed the paths of two objects heading out of the Solar System forever and determined that they also most likely originated from outside of the Solar System. These results improve our understanding of the outer Solar System and beyond.

Not all comets follow closed orbits around the Sun. Some fly through the Solar System at high speed before heading out to interstellar space, never to return. Although it is simple to calculate where these comets are going, determining where they came from is more difficult.


There are two possible scenarios. In the first scenario, a comet is originally in a stable far from the Sun, but gravitational interactions with a passing pull the comet out of its orbit. The comet then falls into the inner Solar System where it can be observed before being flung out into interstellar space. In the second scenario, a originates someplace very far away, perhaps a different planetary system, and as it flies through , by random chance it passes through the Solar System once before continuing on its way.


Arika Higuchi and Eiichiro Kokubo at NAOJ calculated the types of trajectories which would typically be expected in each scenario. The team then compared their calculations to observations of two unusual outbound objects, 1I/'Oumuamua discovered in 2017 and 2I/Borisov discovered in 2019. They found that the interstellar origin scenario provides the better match for the paths of both objects.


The team also showed that it is possible for gas-giant-sized bodies passing close to the Solar System to destabilize long-orbit comets and set them on paths similar to the paths of these two objects. Survey observations have not uncovered any gas-giant-sized bodies which can be linked to these two outbound objects, but further study, both theoretical and observational, of small interstellar objects is needed to better determine the origins of these objects.


These results appeared online as "Hyperbolic orbits in the Solar system: interstellar origin or perturbed Oort cloud comets?" in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society on November 11, 2019 and will be printed in the February 2020 issue.




Explore further



Capturing alien comets: Simulating rogue bodies on their journey through the solar system



More information:
Arika Higuchi et al. Hyperbolic Orbits in the Solar System: Interstellar Origin or Perturbed Oort Cloud Comets?, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (2019). DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stz3153









Citation:
Here and gone: Outbound comets are likely of extra-solar origin (2020, January 17)
retrieved 17 January 2020
from https://phys.org/news/2020-01-outbound-comets-extra-solar.html



This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no
part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.








#Space | https://sciencespies.com/space/here-and-gone-outbound-comets-are-likely-of-extra-solar-origin/

No comments:

Post a Comment