Fri. Nov 22nd, 2024
Occasional Digest - a story for you

When the first object ever known to have visited our Solar System from outer space zoomed past in 2017, it was so strange that at least one leading astronomer was convinced it was an alien vessel.

Researchers have now come up with a simple and “compelling, non-alien explanation” for the interstellar interloper’s bizarre behaviour, although not everyone is convinced.

The object christened ‘Oumuamua — which means “scout” in Hawaiian — left scientists baffled when it was detected by an observatory in Hawaii six years ago.

Astronomers had long been searching for comet-like objects entering our Solar System from the vastness of interstellar space, but had never before observed one.

Unlike comets that travel in from the edges of the Solar System, ‘Oumuamua lacked a tail and a fuzzy halo — known as a coma — which are formed by dust and gas warming in the Sun’s heat.

It was also a peculiar, elongated shape, never before observed in comets or asteroids.

Its diameter was roughly 100 metres but, by some estimates, it was 10 times as long as it was wide, shaped either like a pancake or a cigar.

By the way light glinted off the object, it appeared to be tumbling end over end.

The strangest part was that once ‘Oumuamua slingshotted around the Sun, it sped up and deviated from its expected trajectory, propelled by a mysterious force on its way out of the Solar System.

Scientists were left with four months’ worth of seemingly contradictory data to try to make sense of, that led to a range of theories.

‘Thruster boost’

Jennifer Bergner — who is an expert in astrochemistry at the University of California Berkeley and the co-author of a new study — said many of the theories “stretched the imagination”.

She proposed that ‘Oumuamua started out as a water-rich, comet-like object.

During its interstellar travels it was blasted by penetrating cosmic rays that converted some of its water into hydrogen gas that became trapped within the object’s body.

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