Interstellar Object
Oumuamua, Borisov, & Facts
interstellar object, an object that has entered the solar system from interstellar space. As of 2023, two such objects have been observed: ‘Oumuamua, which was discovered in 2017, and Comet Borisov, which was discovered in 2019.
interstellar object ‘Oumuamua
‘Oumuamua was discovered on October 19, 2017, by the Pan-STARRS 1 telescope in Hawaii. The object was confirmed to be on a hyperbolic orbit—that is, an orbit in which it would not return to pass by the Sun again. The object was given the name ‘Oumuamua, Hawaiian for “reach out for first,” and given the designation 1I/2017 U1, the “1I” denoting it was the first known interstellar object.
‘Oumuamua was not considered a comet because no dust was observed being released. As it went away from the Sun, it accelerated faster than it would have under the influence of gravity alone, suggesting that there was some cometlike release of gases from underneath its surface. However, observations with the Spitzer Space Telescope did not show any release of typical cometary gases, such as carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide. One possible explanation is that ‘Oumuamua is composed of nitrogen ice and is a piece of a body like Pluto.
‘Oumuamua rotates every 7.34 hours. It has an unusual cigarlike or pancakelike shape with a length of several hundred metres. ‘Oumuamua’s incoming velocity was close to the mean for stars near the Sun, so ‘Oumuamua’s journey through the solar system was possibly its first close encounter with a star, and, thus, ‘Oumuamua could likely be a young object, only a few hundred million years old. The detection of ‘Oumuamua has been interpreted to show that interstellar objects routinely pass through the solar system, with a population estimate of at least one such object like ‘Oumuamua inside Earth’s orbit at any time and with about 10,000 in the solar system.
The second interstellar object, Comet Borisov (also called 2I Borisov), was discovered by Russian amateur astronomer Gennady Borisov on August 30, 2019. Observations revealed a cometary coma and tail as well as an orbit showing an origin from outside the solar system. In many of its properties the comet was similar to those of the solar system; however, it had much higher abundances of carbon monoxide gas than any other previously observed comet.
One meteor likely of interstellar origin has also been detected. In 2022 the U.S. Department of Defense announced that a review of classified data indicated that on January 8, 2014, a meteor about 1 metre (3 feet) across entered Earth’s atmosphere near Papua New Guinea with a velocity consistent with being an interstellar object.
Planetary systems early in their history undergo a phase in which giant planets that had formed far from their sun migrate inward. As they travel through the system, they scatter material, some of which attains a velocity high enough that it can escape the planetary system altogether and become an interstellar object. Some of this material would be comets such as Borisov, and planetary migration would cause collisions within the Kuiper belt region, in which pieces of large Pluto-like objects would be ejected from their systems.
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