Did We Miss an Interstellar Comet Four Years Ago? (arxiv.org) 59
Long-time Slashdot reader RockDoctor writes: A paper published on Arxiv last week reports on a project to redetermine the "orbits of long period comets... We recently attempted to check, whether the assumption of a parabolic orbit for hundreds of comets discovered after 1950 is fully justified in all cases." The full work by Królikowska & Dybczynski remains in preparation (which is perfectly normal), but this intriguing result deserved early attention.
During this research we found an interesting case of the comet C/2014 W10 PANSTARRS.
(that's the 10th reported comet in fortnight W of year 2014, source : the PANSTARRS team)
After discovery on 2014-11-25, fourteen observations were made over three days, giving a first-estimate orbit with an eccentricity of 0.6039453. So far, so boring — as the temporary designation suggests, these get found on most days. But that orbit is subject to uncertainty so some more measurements were made on 2014-12-22 from a different observatory. When all of the data is considered, it becomes impossible to clearly assign an orbit to this object (this is possible if, for example, there is a fragmentation of the object between observations), but many of the solutions which can be obtained have a hyperbolic orbit — that is, the object is extra-solar.
If correct, this "post-covery" would double the size of the catalogue of interstellar objects known.
Unfortunately, the quality of the original data remains poor — estimates of the orbital eccentricity vary between 1.22 and 1.65 — which is in contrast to the prompt recognition and intense observation campaign for 'Oumuamua. The report's main conclusion is that
Our main purpose is to show that similar cases should be treated in future with greater care by more reliable preliminary orbit determination and alerting observers about the importance of the object to initiate more follow-up observations.
Which is exactly what happened with 'Oumuamua.
During this research we found an interesting case of the comet C/2014 W10 PANSTARRS.
(that's the 10th reported comet in fortnight W of year 2014, source : the PANSTARRS team)
After discovery on 2014-11-25, fourteen observations were made over three days, giving a first-estimate orbit with an eccentricity of 0.6039453. So far, so boring — as the temporary designation suggests, these get found on most days. But that orbit is subject to uncertainty so some more measurements were made on 2014-12-22 from a different observatory. When all of the data is considered, it becomes impossible to clearly assign an orbit to this object (this is possible if, for example, there is a fragmentation of the object between observations), but many of the solutions which can be obtained have a hyperbolic orbit — that is, the object is extra-solar.
If correct, this "post-covery" would double the size of the catalogue of interstellar objects known.
Unfortunately, the quality of the original data remains poor — estimates of the orbital eccentricity vary between 1.22 and 1.65 — which is in contrast to the prompt recognition and intense observation campaign for 'Oumuamua. The report's main conclusion is that
Our main purpose is to show that similar cases should be treated in future with greater care by more reliable preliminary orbit determination and alerting observers about the importance of the object to initiate more follow-up observations.
Which is exactly what happened with 'Oumuamua.
Re:weird measurements (Score:4)
No wonder you're an AC. I'd be ashamed to put my name to such an admission of incompetence.
Interstellar travel (Score:2)
The may have serious implications for interstellar travel, if it turns out there is a lot more debris out there and space isn't as empty as we thought. A chunk of ice can do a lot of damage when you are going 0.2c.
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Actually, my first guesstimate is that if confirmed, this second pre-covery would generally agree with the estimate that there are of the order of 10000 such objects within the orbit of
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there are of the order of 10000 such objects within the orbit of Neptune at any one time.
This comet was about 800 meters in diameter. If there are 10000 that size, then there are likely millions or billions of smaller objects, the size of a refrigerator or a baseball. At 0.2c, even a pebble or grain of sand can cause enormous damage.
We may want to delay any interstellar colonization voyages for a few years, until we get a better understanding of this problem.
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Too many parabolic orbits (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Too many parabolic orbits (Score:4, Insightful)
But these days we're spending a lot more time observing with a lot bigger "light buckets", and reducing the data astrometrically to orbits a lot faster - which makes the recent discoveries (putative) much less surprising. We can look forward, on this basis, to seeing yearly or more frequent discovery of interstellar objects - exactly as we did with pulsars when I was a school kid and we've done with gravity wave astronomy in the last couple of years.
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That's .... well, a ... tautology would be a polite way of putting it. Since orbits are all about the interplay of velocity with position and gravity field. Of course, the velocity varies somewhat between periapse and apoapse - if the latter has any meaning. Actually, reading up on the messages announcing the realisation of the importance of 'Oumuamua, the humans who looked at the machine-generated orbi
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Re:Too many parabolic orbits (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm just an astronomy fan boy, but if something's coming in from the Oort Cloud, isn't that far enough away that all orbits are going to look parabolic to the limits of measurable accuracy? I mean we can barely determine orbits in the Kupier belt, right?
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I'm not sure, but that sounds about right. In any event, though it wasn't discovered while it was still in the Kuiper Belt, when it would have been too faint to get accurate enough data to calculate the orbit very well.
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I'm just an astronomy fan boy, but if something's coming in from the Oort Cloud, isn't that far enough away that all orbits are going to look parabolic to the limits of measurable accuracy? I mean we can barely determine orbits in the Kupier belt, right?
Bingo.
Not really to the "limits of measurable accuracy" but to the "limits of accuracy measured", sure. Accurate orbital determination requires lots of observations of very dim objects, and telescope time is limited. Not enough observations along a long arc, and it becomes insufficiently determined.
But we do know which are comets are closest to being true parabolas. It is easy to determine. They hit the Sun.
This is not rare, in fact about 100 comets a year do this. In 2010, a good year for sun-diving comets
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"A chance no astrophysicist could pass up."
"I am sorry, Louis Wu. I do not understand."
"The opportunity to study the underside of sunspots."
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You only get a parabolic orbit if it's traveling exactly at escape velocity. OK, yes, I understand that there are limits to how precise our measurements are and that leads to a margin of error in the calculated orbit, but I can't help but think that there's something wrong when there are hundreds of comets discovered since 1950 with calculated orbits at exactly escape velocity, as close as we can calculate it.
Hang on. In other papers these same researchers use the term "near-parabolic" for this same class of comets, this short paper needed an editor. In some cases the observational errors (particularly in the earlier comets) are large that we cannot distinguish them from parabolic orbits. Nothing mysteriously wrong.
FWIW there is no great discovery revealed by this paper. It shows that a recent comet has a sufficiently poorly known orbit that it could be significantly hyperbolic. Or not. The data isn't available.
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OK, thanx. That clears everything up for me. It was just a case of sloppy reporting by somebody who didn't quite understand the article enough to see how much of a difference that one word makes.
Re: Too many parabolic orbits (Score:1)
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To have lower eccentricity and be close enough to the Sun to be seen through much of it's orbit ( e.g 67P/Churyumovâ"Gerasimenko, eccentricity 0.64, perihelion 5.7AU, aphelion 1.2AU) required multip
Miss it? (Score:3)
Yes, I do recall a sort of emptiness and longing as it swooshed by.