Science This mystery object may be our first visitor from another solar system.

Astronomers around the world are trying to track down a small, fast-moving object that is zipping through our solar system.

Screenshot_2017-10-27-12-40-10.png


Is a comet? An asteroid? NASA's not sure. The space agency doesn't even know where it came from, but it's not behaving like the local space rocks and that means it may not be from our solar system.

If that's confirmed, NASA says "it would be the first interstellar object to be observed and confirmed by astronomers."


"We have been waiting for this day for decades," Paul Chodas, manager of NASA's Center for Near-Earth Object Studies, said in a NASA news release. "It's long been theorized that such objects exist -- asteroids or comets moving around between the stars and occasionally passing through our solar system -- but this is the first such detection. So far, everything indicates this is likely an interstellar object, but more data would help to confirm it."


NASA says astronomers are pointing telescopes on the ground and in space at the object to get that data.

For now, the object is being called A/2017 U1. Experts think it's less than a quarter-mile (400 meters) in diameter and it's racing through space at 15.8 miles (25.5 kilometers) per second.

It was discovered October 19 by the University of Hawaii's Pan-STARRS 1 telescope on Haleakala, Hawaii.

Rob Weryk, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Hawaii Institute for Astronomy, was the first to identify the object and immediately realized there was something different about it.

"Its motion could not be explained using either a normal solar system asteroid or comet orbit," he said. "This object came from outside our solar system."

Whatever "it" is, the object isn't a threat to Earth.

NASA say that on October 14, it safely passed our home world at a distance of about 15 million miles (24 million kilometers) -- that's about 60 times the distance to the moon.

Where's it going? Scientists think the object is heading toward the constellation Pegasus and is on its way out of our solar system.

"This is the most extreme orbit I have ever seen," said Davide Farnocchia, a scientist at the Center for Near-Earth Object Studies. "It is going extremely fast and on such a trajectory that we can say with confidence that this object is on its way out of the solar system and not coming back."

"It" may eventually get a better name than A/2017 U1, but since the object is the first of its kind, the International Astronomical Union will have to come up with new rules for naming the object.

https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.cn...s/mystery-object-solar-system-trnd/index.html
 
http://www.eso.org/public/news/eso1737/

It's estimated this thing has been floating around space for millions of years before passing through our neighborhood. What makes it so unique is its oblong shape, and it's reddish color, which hints at an extremely high metal content. This is just cool as fuck.

So we actually got an answer to this thread.
https://kiwifarms.net/threads/this-...irst-visitor-from-another-solar-system.35809/

Welp, nothing to see here. The red color is the only interesting thing about it tbh.
 
Trump Tweet? Like "That rock needs to respect our borders and get lost, probably was looking to land to just sign up for welfare"
I was thinking something more along the lines of: "Just spoke with the aliens, great meeting. #fakenews won't report on this great success, too busy sucking up to crooked Hillary. Very disrespectful."
 
Isn't there a not insignificant extinction event every 65 million years that's theorized to happen because the arm of our galaxy that contains our solar system whips it's way through a more crowded region of space at that frequency? And the last time it happened was... around 65 million years ago?

And extra solar objects suddenly moving at insane speeds through our system would be a sign that's starting?

Did I make that info up or am I remembering something real? Cause, uh. If I'm not remembering something completely fictional, then we should brace ourselves.
Short answer... no, not really.

Earth has experienced (this is all from memory and I may be wrong as I'm on the train and can't easily link things) 5 major extinction events in its history. 6, if you include the Holocene extinction event, which is current and has been going on for as long as humans have had agriculture; it just means species have been wiped out by human expansion (and at a rate ten times as rapid as the extinction rate after the cretacious meteor impact, going by the fossil record).

The events prior to the cretacious meteor aren't as well studied. There's at least one that is still very mysterious which caused something like 95% of all oceanic life (and there wasn't any significant land-based life yet) to be wiped out in the geological blink of an eye, the most common hypothesis I see for that one is that earth was directly hit by a gamma ray burst from a dying star somewhere.

But the long and short of it is these extinction events don't follow a very rigid schedule, and there is no particular reason to think the cretacious meteor was an extrasolar object. Sometimes these things just happen.
 
Back