News on the Sun
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- Huge tornadoes discovered on the Sun
- The Sun got bigger
- Last solar minimum was unusual
- The sound of a solar storm
- Earth’s magnetic field provides vital protection
- The Sun's magnetosphere
- IBEX detects "alien" particles
- Cold Hydrogen gasses recycles sunspots
- Thin layers of cosmic chok-waves
- The Solar cycles
- Comet hits the Sun
- Solar eruption causes massive Aurora's
- Our Solarsystem had a fifth Gas-giant planet
- 6 Coronal Mass Ejections in 24hours!
- New Characteristics of Solar flares discovered
- 40 year old Mariner 5 solar wind problem solved
- Solar wind traced in 3D from Sun to Earth
- Detection of emerging sunspot regions
- SDO Spots Extra Energy in the Sun's Corona
- New images of Vesta from DAWN
- New way to measure magnetism around the Sun
- Solar eruption "blew half the sun to pieces"
- Sun and planets constructed differently
- Solar storm reaches Earth today
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The Sun steals comets from other stars
Thursday, 25 November 2010 13:04
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| Solar system - The Sun |
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The next time you thrill at the sight of a comet blazing across the night sky, consider this: it's a stolen pleasure. You're enjoying the spectacle at the expense of a distant star. Sophisticated computer simulations run by researchers at the Southwest Research Institute (SWRI) have exposed the crime. "If the results are right, our Sun snatched comets from neighboring stars' back yards," says SWRI scientist Hal Levison. And he believes this kind of thievery accounts for most of the comets in the Oort Cloud at the edge of our solar system. "We know that stars form in clusters. The Sun was born within a huge community of other stars that formed in the same gas cloud. In that birth cluster, the stars were close enough together to pull comets away from each other via gravity. It's like neighborhood children playing in each others' back yards. It's hard to imagine it not happening." According to this "thief" model, comets accompanied the nearest star when the birth cluster blew apart. The Sun made off with quite a treasure – the Oort Cloud, which was swarming with comets from all over the "neighborhood." The Oort cloud is an immense cloud of comets orbiting the Sun far beyond Pluto. It is named after mid-20th century Dutch astronomer Jan Oort, who first proposed such a cloud to explain the origin of comets sometimes seen falling into the inner solar system. Although no confirmed direct observations of the Oort cloud have been made, most astronomers believe that it is the source of all long-period and Halley-type comets.
The standard model of comet production asserts that our Sun came by these comets honestly: "That model says the comets are dregs of our own solar system's planetary formation and that our planets gravitationally booted them to huge distances, populating the cloud. But we believe this kind of scenario happened in all the solar systems before the birth cluster dispersed." Otherwise, says Levison, the numbers just don't add up: "The standard model can't produce anywhere near the number of comets we see [falling in from the Oort Cloud]. The Sun's sibling stars had to have contributed some comets to the mix." Comets in the Oort Cloud are typically 2-3km across, and they're so far away that estimating their numbers is no easy task. But Levison and his team say that, based on observations, that there should be something like 400 billion comets there. The "domestic" model of comet formation can account for a population of only about 6 billion. "That's a pretty anemic Oort Cloud, and a huge discrepancy – too huge to be explained by mistakes in the estimates. There's no way we could be that far off, so there has to be something wrong with the model itself." He points to the cometary orbits as evidence: "These comets are in very odd orbits – highly eccentric long-period orbits that take them far from our Sun, into remote regions of space. So they couldn't have been born in orbit around the Sun. They had to have formed close to other stars and then been hijacked here." This means comets can tell us not only about the early history of the Sun – but also about the history of other stars. "We can study the orbits of comets and put their chemistry into the context of where and around which star they formed. It's intriguing to think we got some of our 'stuff' from distant stars.." Source: Science@NASA |





