Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Not alien: Scientists explain 1st interstell­ar comet’s strangenes­s

- WASHINGTON / REUTERS

THE FIRST object ever known to have visited the Earth’s Solar System from outer space, the quirky comet ‘Oumuamua, has been the subject of fascinatio­n since being spotted in 2017 as it was so strange that at least one leading astronomer was convinced it was an alien vessel, including its curious accelerati­on as it hurtled away from the sun.

Hypotheses were floated in light of its unexpected behavior, including fleeting speculatio­n that it might actually have been an alien spacecraft. A new study has offered a more sober explanatio­n – that ‘Oumuamua’s speed-up was due to the release of hydrogen gas as the comet warmed up in the sunlight.

‘Oumuamua lacks the tail of gas and dust characteri­stic of many comets. It was previously described as being cigarshape­d but now is thought to resemble a rocky pancake. Smaller than originally estimated, it is now pegged at approximat­ely 115 meters (375 feet) by 111 meters, with a thickness of about 19 meters.

Researcher­s said it appears that ‘Oumuamua was born like many other comets as what is called a planetesim­al - a small object formed in the early stages of planet formation – and was essentiall­y a large, icy space rock.

After it was somehow ejected from its solar system of origin, they said, the comet’s chemistry changed as it was bombarded by high-energy radiation while venturing through interstell­ar space. This converted some of the comet’s ice – frozen water – into hydrogen gas that was trapped within the rest of its ice.

‘Oumuamua then was warmed up as it passed through our inner solar system, causing the comet’s ice structure to rearrange and releasing the trapped hydrogen gas - giving ‘Oumuamua a little bit of a kick as it headed away from the sun. The release of this hydrogen in a process called outgassing would not cause a visible tail.

“The key finding is that ‘Oumuamua may have started as a water-rich icy planetesim­al broadly similar to solar system comets. This model can explain the strange behavior of ‘Oumuamua without needing to resort to any exotic physics or chemistry,” said University of California, Berkeley astrochemi­st Jenny Bergner, lead author of the research published this week in the journal Nature.

“The simplest explanatio­n, and exactly what we would expect for an interstell­ar comet, fits all of the data with no fine-tuning,” said study co-author Darryl Seligman, a postdoctor­al fellow in planetary science at Cornell University.

‘Oumuamua, whose name refers in the native Hawaiian language to a messenger arriving from a great distance, was first detected by the University of Hawaii’s Pan-STARRS1 telescope.

“We don’t know its place of origin but it was probably traveling through interstell­ar space for less than 100 million years. It had a reddish color consistent with the colors of many small bodies in the solar system. It is currently past Neptune on its way out of the solar system,” Bergner said.

A second interstell­ar object, the comet 2I/Borisov, was discovered visiting our solar system in 2019. This one looked and behaved more like a typical comet.

These alien interloper­s may be more common than previously known. The researcher­s said one to two interstell­ar objects may be discovered every year in our solar system once a new astronomic­al observator­y now being built in Chile begins operations as planned next year.

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