New Asteroid Flies Backward, Comes From Another Sun
Known as 2015 BZ509, it's only the second of its kind ever found
By Newser Editors and Wire ServicesOn Monday, scientists reported that an asteroid sharing Jupiter’s orbit, but in reverse, actually hails from a neighboring star system
(GSFC) via AP, File)
Just months after the discovery of our first known interstellar visitor, it turns out there's another asteroid from yet another star system residing in our cosmic club in plain view. Per the AP, scientists reported Monday that this interstellar resident is an asteroid sharing Jupiter's orbit but circling in the opposite direction.
The asteroid, known as 2015 BZ509, has been in this peculiar backward orbit around the sun ever since getting sucked into our solar system, the researchers said. About 2 miles across, it joined our neighborhood in the first moments after our solar system formed 4.5 billion years ago. The French and Brazilian researchers base their finding on extensive computer simulations showing BZ always has orbited around the sun in reverse and thus harkens back to the beginning of our solar system.
The results, published in the journal Royal Astronomical Society, come several months after the discovery of our first known interstellar visitor, a smaller asteroid named Oumuamua "Oumuamua is of interstellar origin but it is also only a tourist passing by our solar system," said lead author Fathi Namouni of the University of Cote d'Azur in Nice, France. "BZ is not. It is a bona fide immigrant and the notion of immigration is a hot topic nowadays all over the world!" It's extremely unlikely—"practically zero"—that BZ came from the same star system as Oumuamua, according to Namouni. By identifying more immigrant asteroids, Namouni said, scientists can determine their composition. If BZ contains water, for example, researchers can compare it with Earth's water and, perhaps, better understand how water originated here at home.
No comments:
Post a Comment