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Space Science

Harvard Researchers Suggest Interstellar Object Might Have Been From Alien Civilization (bostonglobe.com) 162

A strange interstellar object that invaded our solar system and passed close to Earth in the fall of 2017 could have been an artificial object, a piece of a spacecraft from an alien civilization, Harvard researchers are suggesting in a new paper [PDF]. From a report: "There is data on the orbit of this object for which there is no other explanation. So we wrote this paper suggesting this explanation," said Professor Avi Loeb, chairman of the Harvard astronomy department. "The approach I take to the subject is purely scientific and evidence-based. As far as I know, there is no other explanation. You can rule it out or in, based on additional data." He said the study had been accepted for publication in the The Astrophysical Journal Letters on Nov. 12.

The paper, written by Loeb and postdoctoral researcher Shmuel Bialy, suggests the object might be a light sail, or solar sail -- a proposed method of powering spacecraft that uses a sail to catch radiation pressure and propel the spacecraft, just as a normal sail uses the wind to propel a boat. The object 'Oumuamua -- Hawaiian for "messenger from afar arriving first" -- is the first ever observed intruding in the orbits of our planets. It was picked up by telescopes in October 2017 at the University of Hawaii's Haleakala Observatory, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration said. It is on its way out of the solar system and expected to never return. Scientists say other "interstellar" objects may have sailed by in the past, undetected.

The object raised eyebrows. It was monitored for signs of radio signals as weak as one-tenth of a cellphone-strength signal, but nothing was detected. Researchers said in December 2017 that it appeared to be a naturally formed, icy object covered with a dry crust.
Further reading: Interstellar Visitor 'Oumuamua Is a Comet After All (June 2018), Scientists say mysterious 'Oumuamua' object could be an alien spacecraft, and Cigar-shaped interstellar object may have been an alien probe, Harvard paper claims.
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Harvard Researchers Suggest Interstellar Object Might Have Been From Alien Civilization

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  • Obligatory (Score:5, Funny)

    by XxtraLarGe ( 551297 ) on Tuesday November 06, 2018 @09:03AM (#57599208) Journal
  • the mothership arrives, then we'll all be sorry for not listening to Dr Quack!
  • Researchers said in December 2017 that it appeared to be a naturally formed, icy object covered with a dry crust.

    They must be SUPER advanced to cause their object to naturally form like that!!!

    • by jd ( 1658 )

      If you wanted to travel to another solar system in a generation ship, would you build one from scratch or hollow out something suitable?

      • Would something you "hollow out" be anything like an optimal shape for maximising area of rotational pseudo-gravity interior surface versus external mass of radiation shielding (bagged dirt)? Personally, I'd suspect that the near-optimal strategy would be to reconstruct a (small) nickel-iron rich asteroid into your habitat then wrap it with (bagged) debris from another dirty-snowball to put something like 10m water-equivalent of radiation-shielding between the population and the outside universe. Since most
        • by jd ( 1658 )

          You certainly wouldn't optimize the shape to feed the plants. You're either using hydroponics or a Biosphere II with artificial lighting inside. You'd have to. Whether you could pull off a Rendezvous With Rama-style dormancy is unclear, but frankly I don't see any advantage to it. If you're going the Biosphere II route, you need some decking, some artificial lighting, power and pumps for artificial circulation. There, you'd need gravity. If you're opting for hydroponics, why bother? The plants won't care.

          I'

          • There, you'd need gravity. If you're opting for hydroponics, why bother? The plants won't care.

            Plants grow well without a gravity feed? Well, if you're growing algal feedstock for a "food synthesiser" (what is the Unobtanium budget for one of those? Or does it use Handwavium?), maybe not. Otherwise, for something resembling a balanced diet for the crew (assuming most of the colony-building animals are shipped as gametes, and a small number of live animals for use as wombs on arrival), you're going to need a

  • Occam's razor (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Crashmarik ( 635988 ) on Tuesday November 06, 2018 @09:09AM (#57599230)

    Not to be a downer but a far simpler explanation is that it just had an unusual manner of outgassing possibly due to the volatiles being below the surface and taking longer to heat.

    • Re:Occam's razor (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday November 06, 2018 @10:36AM (#57599728)

      Not to be a downer but a far simpler explanation is that it just had an unusual manner of outgassing possibly due to the volatiles being below the surface and taking longer to heat.

      Let's see your numbers, bro. From the article:

      "Oumuamua shows no signs of a any cometary activity, no cometary tail, nor gas emission/absorption lines were observed (Meech et al. 2017; Knight et al. 2017; Jewitt et al. 2017; Ye et al. 2017; Fitzsimmons et al. 2017). From a theoretical point of view, Rafikov (2018) has shown that if outgassing was responsible for the acceleration (as originally proposed by Micheli et al. 2018), then the associated outgassing torques would have driven a rapid evolution in ‘Oumuamua’s spin, incompatible with observations."

      • Re:Occam's razor (Score:4, Interesting)

        by RockDoctor ( 15477 ) on Tuesday November 06, 2018 @02:18PM (#57601482) Journal

        Let's see your numbers, bro.

        I haven't been keeping a count, but I do read the daily listings of new papers on Arxiv and I'm more or less up to date (one submission on my desktop at this time) there have been on the order of a dozen proposals from various sources trying various models of tholin/ dust crusting the surface of 'Oumuamua. While it's not exactly an exciting position to take, it is a consensus position.

        Do your own homework. I have, to match the extent that I care about the topic.

    • Yes, and that's exactly what the paper's authors looked at.

      However, this is a draft paper, and hasn't made it through the peer-review process. I've had a couple of papers that were drastically transformed by the peer-review process. It would be interesting to track down this paper if it gets published. My bet is that the suggestion of an artificial explanation to the acceleration will be very much toned down, if not removed entirely.

  • by Oswald McWeany ( 2428506 ) on Tuesday November 06, 2018 @09:11AM (#57599240)

    It might have been alien, but almost certainly wasn't.

  • by 140Mandak262Jamuna ( 970587 ) on Tuesday November 06, 2018 @09:13AM (#57599248) Journal
    Message to Heavens Gate STOP Pick up delayed STOP Delayed by 19 orbits around your star STOP Thanks, Your SpaceUberPilot R2D2C3PO STOP.
  • by jfdavis668 ( 1414919 ) on Tuesday November 06, 2018 @09:16AM (#57599266)
    If it deployed a light sail upon leaving the solar system, the sail would be reflecting sunlight back at us now. A sail big enough to accelerate an object of that size would be visible.
    • by bill_mcgonigle ( 4333 ) * on Tuesday November 06, 2018 @09:24AM (#57599314) Homepage Journal

      If it deployed a light sail upon leaving the solar system, the sail would be reflecting sunlight back at us now. A sail big enough to accelerate an object of that size would be visible.

      Nobody has suggested that. The suggestion is that it could be a discarded piece of an old light sail.

      I just happened to read the paper yesterday, and we're here dozens of comments in and nobody commenting has read it.

      The jokes are amusing but assuming what the paper says and reacting to it is a less useful application of time that reading it (and maybe not even taking the time for reacts, if one must choose) or just cracking stupid jokes.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        You must be new here

        • by Anonymous Coward

          Did not once mention Natalie Portman.

      • Problem with could is that it also be could not. It's an interesting object with some unique properties (not confirmed to be unusual because first of its type) and to put an alien spin on it is an attention seeking activity even among scientists. That attention seeking warrants jokes and moreso at the expense of the scientists that mention aliens seriously in any academic paper (unless they have definitive proof of course).

        What we have is a first of its kind observation of a celestial occurrence that should

        • by gtall ( 79522 )

          My own view is that it is a giant Space Monkey turd. C'mon, elongated shape, weird trajectory, no identifying marks. The fellow just launched it here about 100 million years ago to buzz our solar system as a prank.

          • I choose to believe in Space Monkey Turds and a Flying Space Pizza. Not because it is easy with evidence. But because it is hard to convince the non-believers that I am correct.

      • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 ) on Tuesday November 06, 2018 @10:23AM (#57599644)
        It's clearly an alien spacecraft that got hulled and tumbled out uncontrollably into space in a battle long ago. Over the millennia it's been floating through space it simply iced over and collected dust. Either that or the Arachnids missed us, those stupid bugs.
      • Yeah, trying to use your braincell on Slashdot sometimes feels like a waste of effort. http://www.catb.org/~esr/jargo... [catb.org]

        (I'm about a third of the way through reading the paper, and I decided to check for substantive comment here. Depressing, isn't it?)

    • If it deployed a light sail upon leaving the solar system, the sail would be reflecting sunlight back at us now.

      The advanced alien sail technology is constructed of dark matter and powered by dark energy.

      A sail big enough to accelerate an object of that size would be visible.

      You need to apply the definitions of real and virtual here:

      If it's there, and you can see it . . . it's real.

      If it's not there, but you can see it . . . it's virtual.

      If it's not there, and you can't see it . . . it's gone.

  • Get Elon to chase it down.
    • He can't - he's lost the keys to his Tesla.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday November 06, 2018 @09:23AM (#57599300)

    Obviously it was alien and in search of intelligence and it just passed us by.

  • by fuzznutz ( 789413 ) on Tuesday November 06, 2018 @09:23AM (#57599306)
    I don't know but it looked like a giant dump from Omicron Persei 8.
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Re:It's a rock (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday November 06, 2018 @09:37AM (#57599396)

      Also, the closer you get to the galactic center the more volatile to life the environment gets. As such, life has more time to grow and advance the further one is from the galactic core

      That's quite an assumption. A more violent environment (assuming you meant violent and not volatile) might also be a driving force behind faster evolution.

      For example, on earth the great extinctions actually sped up the evolution. Without them (or better: in between them) evolution went relative slow.

      Of course, you don't want a bunch of supernova's and gamma rays ionizing any atom on the planet all the time, but a more `challenging` environment might as well speed up evolution instead of slowing it down. We just don't know yet until we increase our current sample size of 1.

      (posting as anon as i modded a bit in the topic already)

      • Earth didn't develop complex life until things calmed down here. From our current working sample set (size: 1) it's reasonable to assume that you need a less chaotic environment to develop life. You might need a moon to stir things up, though.

        It's just another kind of goldilocks zone.

        • by sfcat ( 872532 )

          Earth didn't develop complex life until things calmed down here. From our current working sample set (size: 1) it's reasonable to assume that you need a less chaotic environment to develop life. You might need a moon to stir things up, though.

          It's just another kind of goldilocks zone.

          The moon actually keeps things calm down here on Earth. Its a self-balancing mechanism that prevents the Earth's movements from doing anything too radical.

          • But the Moon also appreciably increases the Earth's impact cross section by widening the effective gravity field from the 1/r^2 of a simple system.

            There is an awful lot of extrapolation done from the sample of one evolutionary system that we have, and happen to be living in the middle of. And a lot of awful extrapolation.

          • "The moon... prevents the Earth's movements from doing anything too radical." Then how do you explain lunacy?

      • So did social development. There is a lot of evidence that the sudden flooding of the Black Sea caused a major impulse in civilisation.

        • Yeah. Uh, there is a lot of discussion on that suggestion. Whether the seismic (you know, the original data on which the whole proposition is based) actually supports Ryan and Pitman's original interpretation of one catastrophic flooding event remains very much a topic of debate [wikipedia.org]. There are certainly multiple scour channels on the Black Sea side of the Bosphorus, though what the levels of the Bosphorus were for each scouring event is ... very debatable. Let alone their dating, absolute and relative.

          Yeah, it

    • Time dilation due to Sagittarius A* is only experienced at extremely close distances to its event horizon. S2, the closest known star to Sagittarius A*, at a distance of ~1000 AU experiences time dilation of less than 0.1% (that's one tenth of 1%)
  • The object is neither long enough or wide enough to hold a multitude of species. Nor was its approach to the Sun close enough to allow the Frozen Sea to melt. Finally, when it dove out of the orbital plane, it never accelerated sharply.

    Thus, we can safely say it is not a Raman design. Besides, we didn't have any spacecraft capable of intercepting it and having people explore it.

  • I don't know if I will believe in the aliens idea, but if it is it may be:
    1. A spaceship with hairdressers and Telephone cleaners (Hitchhiker guide to the Galaxy)
    2. Aliens looking for intelligent life somewhere and they just by change passed near us.
    3. Aleins detected signals around this solar system and were exploring Venus or Jupiter
    4. Aliens have found us, and have alreadyy sent down a landing capsule to Earth loaded with explorerer

  • It is unfortunately the first in a gigantic 'caravan' of alien immigrants.
    Among them are drug dealers and gang members.
    Many are pregnant and will deposit their fertilized eggs on American soil.
    The only solution is to build a wall around the entire Earth.
  • Look it up if you haven't already. Great book.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      I think this Oumuamua case is more similar to a short story in the collection of "Pirx the Pilot" by Stanislaw Lem. In that an alien mega ship wreck flies right through the solar system but due to general incompetence and lack of attention it becomes too late to give chase while the object moves out at 3rd cosmic speed.

  • I'm not certain how useful a solar sail would be on a device that came from another solar system. Yaknow, there's that interstellar space between thier system and ours.

    Meanwhile the "Ancient Aliens" crowd just orgasmed with this BS.

    • by dissy ( 172727 )

      I'm not certain how useful a solar sail would be on a device that came from another solar system.

      To be a solar system implies having a star. A solar sail in another solar system with a star would be just as useful as a solar sail within our own solar system.

      The fact such a thing would eventually end up leaving the solar system it was originally in shouldn't be assumed to be intentional so much as a fact of nature.
      All of the probes we have ever sent out so far will have that same fate, and the voyagers may have already done so depending where you put the edge of the solar system to be. In a few millio

  • by johannesg ( 664142 ) on Tuesday November 06, 2018 @10:46AM (#57599782)

    We know its current course and speed, so if you extrapolate into the distant past, does it cross the orbit of any nearby star?

    • Stars move. Our distance estimates have uncertainty to them, and the glare of each star's light introduces an uncertainty in their angular position measurement. In short, over the many millennia of travel, we don't know the previous positions of nearby stars well enough to constrain 'Oumuamua's path well enough. Yes, astrometry is improving (see, for example, Gaia data release 2). No, it is not adequate to that task, and probably never will be, because there is dark (sense : not luminous) stuff too, in suff
  • It was monitored for signs of radio signals as weak as one-tenth of a cellphone-strength signal, but nothing was detected.

    Obligatory... [xkcd.com]

  • Paging Elon Musk! (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Applehu Akbar ( 2968043 ) on Tuesday November 06, 2018 @12:24PM (#57600458)

    How far is SpaceX away from being able to cobble up a flyby probe to at least get a close look at this object?

    • How far is SpaceX away from being able to cobble up a flyby probe to at least get a close look at this object?

      Probably not possible. Oumaumua is traveling at 26 km/s at infinity. So far, the fastest space craft we've made is the Parker Probe which was only 21 km/s while diving towards the sun. So, it's traveling faster than anything else we've managed (Voyagers are in the upper teens for km/s) to send into space. I have my doubts on the current Falcon Heavy being able to get any faster. The BFR might, but it's years out, but it's such a faint object that Oumuamua might be too far out to keep track of by that time i

    • A few dozen astronomic units ...

  • Nothing stops it (Score:5, Insightful)

    by jd ( 1658 ) <imipakNO@SPAMyahoo.com> on Tuesday November 06, 2018 @01:09PM (#57600868) Homepage Journal

    From being just a rock and a spaceship.

    If you wanted to fly to the stars, you'd need a ship with a very thick hull to handle galactic background radiation. If you wanted to go slow, you'd also make it a generation ship, which means you need something very large for the population and life support.

    That's simply not very practical to build. But why build? Find an asteroid on an extreme elliptical orbit, hollow it out, and use the interior for your ship. Walls already made for you, and you've extracted ore you can use to make floors, engines, etc.

    It probably was just a fragment from two planets colliding, but the assumption that it couldn't have been that plus a spaceship is flawed.

    The lack of signal isn't an issue. Why would a generation ship transmit signals? Who would it transmit to? Space is very big, after all, and radio is very slow. With walls thick enough to shield against galactic winds, nothing on the inside would have reached Earth.

    Only way we could have known for sure would be to have put a lander on it. But there's a distinct lack of space probes capable of such redirected missions. Thank you, American tax payer. Arthur C. Clarke would have been fuming. The good news is that the builders of Rama do everything in threes.

    • If you wanted to fly to the stars, you'd need a ship with a very thick hull to handle galactic background radiation.

      Only about a dozen metres of water-ice. Down to around 5m for a 50-50 ice-rock dust mix. Not trivial, but not horrendous.

      The odds of meeting something large enough to fragment ... well, 'Oumuamua got here after an uncertain (but probably very long) travel, so ... low enough. Send two, travelling outside their mutual ballistic debris cones.

      Walls already made for you, and you've extracted ore y

  • by cpotoso ( 606303 ) on Tuesday November 06, 2018 @02:23PM (#57601532) Journal
    Please... take our leader.
  • This is an irreproducable result that is impossible to test. Hence it's not science. One can make up any sort of supposition in these cases. At best we can only wait for another such occurrence and see if we can collect better data.
    • "Next time you're visited
      By little green aliens,
      They're not there unless
      They come back twice a week."

      -- Dr. Jane, "A Scientist Looks At Things That Don't Exist".

  • by ripvlan ( 2609033 ) on Tuesday November 06, 2018 @03:20PM (#57602046)

    /. fell for it too. I think Ars has a good write up of the click-bait news cycle on this one. The paper is pages long and goes into great detail. Then on the last line "could be aliens too" and that's all people read.

    Bloggers vs Science Writers.

    "Predictably, online media go nuts over ‘Oumuamua and Harvard scientists"
    https://arstechnica.com/scienc... [arstechnica.com]

  • Not the "done thing", I know.

    4. TENSILE STRESSES A thin object can be torn apart by centrifugal forces or tidal forces if its tensile strength is not sufficiently strong. [...] 4.1. Rotation

    Works out to around 0.65 dyne/sq.cm. depending on your assumption for the material density

    This is much smaller than typical tensile strengths of normal materials, and even of that of the comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko (see Table 1). Thus, even when self-gravity is ignored, âOumuamua can easily withstand its cent

    • To compound my sin of RTFAing, I'll note that there is a revised version of the paper out. As far as I can tell the changes are that they've changed the header to the "ACCEPTED FOR PUBLICATION IN THE ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL LETTERS" statement, and added a reference at the end. The rest of the contents look essentially the same.
  • Wonder how much space cash is on there.
  • It must be either RAMA or the Ark Ship 'B'...

  • To start with the obvious, IANAA(stronomer).

    However, looking at the object's trajectory [hawaii.edu] I find it interesting that it passes so close to the sun - almost as if it was targeted this way.

    Of course, if it had passed too far from the sun, we wouldn't have seen it at all. Still, I'd expect interstellar objects within say the orbit of Jupiter to be noticed. However, Oumuamua's closest approach to the sun (at 38,100,000 km) hit a circle less than 1/400 of the area of Jupiter's orbit. It does seem a bit weird to me

    • That's a fair question/ comment.

      If you RTFA'd on 'Oumuamua as it was happening (which I do to a degree by at least reading the abstracts as they go past on the Arxiv mailing list, one email a day, and fully reading interesting papers), you'd have seen that the normal unit of measure for "interstellar objects passing near the Sun" is actually to count "bodies within a sphere containing Neptune". Quite what the logic behind that is, I'm not sure, but it's a volume of about 3.80E+29cu.km. If they looked at bo

      • Oh, sorry, after introducing C/2014 W10 PANSTARRS, I forgot the original point. They (K&D) made a number of attempts to get a coherent solution for the orbit (the details are in the paper, see links already posted), which gave wildly divergent dates of perihelion dates and distances :
        perihelion passage date : 2015 Feb. 9.246 ; 2014 Feb. 06.757 ; 2014 Feb. 07.6 ±979 days ; 2016 Aug. 17.267 ; 2013 Aug. 29.115 ; 2016 Jul. 15.6 ±211 days ; 2013 Jul. 3.8 ±102 days ; 2013 May 16.2
  • Each and every time some interesting object up in the sky hits the headlines, you get some fucking retard saying it's aliens. Harvard clearly needs to up their game if they have morons like this on board. This is a fucking rock from deep space. It's not a fucking spaceship, GROW UP.

As you will see, I told them, in no uncertain terms, to see Figure one. -- Dave "First Strike" Pare

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