Harvard Astronomers Challenge Theory That 'Oumuamua Was a Nitrogen Iceberg (livescience.com) 50
"Although Oumuamua probably isn't some probe looking for humpbacked whales," writes Slashdot reader alaskana98, "it does continue to deliver plenty of intrigue — and controversy — for those astronomy buffs out there.
"In the latest move in the war on who gets to define what exactly OuMuaMua is, Harvard astrophysicists Amir Siraj and Avi Loeb have countered the prevailing hypothesis that it is a frozen chunk of nitrogen with their own — that it is simply not possible."
LiveScience reports: According to Siraj and his co-author, Harvard astrophysicist Avi Loeb, Jackson and Desch's conclusion that 'Oumuamua is a nitrogen iceberg is flawed because there isn't enough nitrogen in the universe to make an object like 'Oumuamua, which is somewhere between 1,300 and 2,600 feet (400 and 800 meters) long and between 115 and 548 feet (35 and 167 m) wide.
Pure nitrogen is rare, Siraj said, and has been found only on Pluto, where it makes up about 0.5% of the total mass. Even if all of the nitrogen ice in the universe was scraped off every Pluto-like planet that's predicted to exist, there still wouldn't be enough nitrogen to make 'Oumuamua.
"In the latest move in the war on who gets to define what exactly OuMuaMua is, Harvard astrophysicists Amir Siraj and Avi Loeb have countered the prevailing hypothesis that it is a frozen chunk of nitrogen with their own — that it is simply not possible."
LiveScience reports: According to Siraj and his co-author, Harvard astrophysicist Avi Loeb, Jackson and Desch's conclusion that 'Oumuamua is a nitrogen iceberg is flawed because there isn't enough nitrogen in the universe to make an object like 'Oumuamua, which is somewhere between 1,300 and 2,600 feet (400 and 800 meters) long and between 115 and 548 feet (35 and 167 m) wide.
Pure nitrogen is rare, Siraj said, and has been found only on Pluto, where it makes up about 0.5% of the total mass. Even if all of the nitrogen ice in the universe was scraped off every Pluto-like planet that's predicted to exist, there still wouldn't be enough nitrogen to make 'Oumuamua.
How could they possibly know? (Score:4, Interesting)
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"See" billions of light years sure. We can see indistinct dots of light and even vast spreads of either backlit dust or gas. We have no idea what it really is.
"Light Spectrum indicates what the material is"
Assuming it's lit by the same wavelengths as objects observed under laboratory conditions at extremely close range.
This argument smacks of the kinds of professions that arose in the 60's to predict the language Martians spoke.
Pure nonsense.
Re:How could they possibly know? (Score:4, Informative)
Not only that, but their math is awful.
"Pure nitrogen is rare, Siraj said, and has been found only on Pluto, where it makes up about 0.5% of the total mass. Even if all of the nitrogen ice in the universe was scraped off every Pluto-like planet that's predicted to exist, there still wouldn't be enough nitrogen to make 'Oumuamua"
Except that Pluto is what, 19 orders of magnitude more massive than Oumuaua? And the surface of Pluto is supposedly 98% nitrogen ice.
Until Siraj does the math long form and shows the work, even as a complete lay person I'm going to ignore this.
Re:How could they possibly know? (Score:5, Interesting)
Yah, looks to me like someone lost track of some unit conversions when estimating the amount of nitrogen available. Hell, the planet we're all sitting on has (admittedly not frozen) around 4,000,000,000,000,000 tons of nitrogen in its atmosphere.
Oumuamua was rather less than a quarter million tons of nitrogen...
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For it to be a Chunk Of Ice, it needs to have split from something that IS that ice. There isn't any conceivable manner in which there is a pure nitrogen ice sheet, ball, blob, ocean, whatever the hell, that a chunk the size of the object could've been sheared off.
It's not about "Total nitrogen in non ice, spread out, unusable form", it's specifically about "A chunk of nitrogen ice".
If you could purify and freeze all the nitrogen on earth, well, we'd have an issue breathing.. But you get the point, I hope.
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Didn't this space rock fly in from another galaxy? How do we know such a ball of frozen nitrogen doesn't exist? Could of broken off of some other object or even could of been significantly bigger but over the eons lost some of it's mass.
Since we don't really know it's origins, it could be a chunk of nitrogen ice. I don't know myself, I'm not an astronomer.
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Of course, an Editor would realise this and think twice about publishing the story, or issue a correction.
But: Slashdot.
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The surface ice is indeed a very small part of the mass of pluto, you're going waaay overboard in your own arrogance, even worse than these idiot physicists.
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This isn't, "We shot a laser at the rock and it turns out it wasn't what we thought." This is, "We made a bunch of assumptions that show that whatever this rock is, there's no way this other guy can possibly be right about what it might be."
Wake me up on data.
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Sure. Like the "other guy" said, they didn't find any mistakes in the math, so (paraphrasing) they should shut up.
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That's a pretty unlikely outcome for a large impactor, isn't it? Don't those usually result in something more like an ejecta cloud, and not a single solid object? Plus the localized heating on impact would seem to suggest at least some of nitrogen would be converted to gas and not solidify into a large coherent object.
It seems like this thing is torn between two sides, one side who wants a simplified answer and another who wants an extremely unlikely answer, closing the door on other speculation.
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Considering that our planets atmosphere is > 70% nitrogen you are right.
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It could have been pure nitrogen, it could have been pure unobtanium.
There is not enough unobtainium in the whole universe to prove a negative, so we know the physicists didn't build their hyp^H^H^speculation from that!
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It's just a misleading formulation in the livescience article uncritically copy+pasted into the summary. From the article abstract:
[W]e show that the mass budget in exo-Pluto planets necessary to explain the detection of ‘Oumuamua as a nitrogen iceberg chipped off from a planetary surface requires a mass of heavy elements exceeding the total quantity locked in stars with 95% confidence [...]
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Nitrogen is actually pretty common in the universe; we can tell by looking at spectra. Overall it's the seventh most abundant element in our galaxy judging by spectra. But in the Solar System it's distributed unevenly; it's common on Earth where it makes up 78% of the atmosphere but rare on the Moon. It's common in some classes of asteroids but not others.
Clearly the hypothesis that Oumuamua was mostly nitrogen would make it unlike Pluto, or indeed any other *known* object. There are other objects like
Summary Wrong! (Score:4, Informative)
I am not an astrophysicist so I have no idea how plausible this argument is. However, since it relies on the amount and distribution of nitrogen in a solar system not on the total availability of nitrogen in the universe it is not one that can be immediately dismissed as obviously wrong.
Re: How could they possibly know? (Score:2)
Scientific click bait.
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Occam's Razor (Score:1)
It was a spaceship.
Simple as.
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And our leaders know it.
They're begging the question. (Score:2)
Made by Pak Protectors? (Score:2)
For some reason, TFA reminds me of Larry Niven's "Ringworld" which was built by Pak Protectors who were able to transmute the mass of a gas giant like Jupiter into scrith and created the structure around the star.
But that's what makes 'Oumuamua so fascinating, he [Siraj] added. "I don't really care what it is, because every single possibility is an astrophysical object we've never seen before, so that's why it's exciting."
So if you're middle aged and see something that looks like a tree root that smells wonderful, don't eat it.
It’s actually aliens... (Score:5, Funny)
Isn't there an old song about this? (Score:2)
Pretty sure the Rivingtons/Trashmen had a song about this.
"Papa Oumuamua, Papa Oumuamua..."
The Rivingtons:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
The Trashmen:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
Re: It’s actually aliens... (Score:2)
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The original paper (Score:5, Informative)
Sure what's the chance that it's nitrogen (Score:1)
when the stuff is so rare and alienz are so abundant.
Poster child for abolishing tenure.
Catch It (Score:2)
Next time we see something like this, we should see if we can adjust it's trajectory so that we can get it to Mars. We need all the Nitrogen we can get to enhance its atmosphere and use as fertilizer for crops.
Too bad that reality says that if it's big enough to be helpful, it's too massive to redirect.
Re: Catch It (Score:1)
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Surface gravity of Pluto is something like 1/16th that of Earth's.
I say, send a nuclear powered harvester to Pluto to break off chunks and lob them towards Mars. Nitrogen the HELL out of that planet.
Actually no. Use Charon instead, then there's half again as little gravity to deal with.
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Slipped decimal point? (Like down the ski slope?) (Score:3)
Desch's conclusion that 'Oumuamua is a nitrogen iceberg is flawed because there isn't enough nitrogen in the universe to make an object like 'Oumuamua, which is somewhere between 1,300 and 2,600 feet (400 and 800 meters) long and between 115 and 548 feet (35 and 167 m) wide.
ORLY?
The universe is a big place and even one Pluto has a lot of nitrogen ice. So (ignoring all the OTHER pure nitrogen lying around in the universe - such as in - and "blowing off" from, the atmospheres of planets like Earth...):
mass of Pluto = 1.30900 x 10^22 kilograms
Pure nitrogen [ice] is rare, Siraj said, and has been found only on Pluto, where it makes up about 0.5% of the total mass.
mass of nitrogen ice on Pluto: 6 x 10^24 g
Nitrogen frost [as glaciers on Pluto's surface under its gravitational field] has a density of 0.85 g cm^â'3. [enough denser than water ice that water icebergs float on nitrogen frost glaciers]
volume of nitrogen ice on Pluto: 7 x 10^18 m^3
volume of nitrogen ice in Oumuamua (using upper numbers for dimensions: 800 x 167 x 167 m and treating it as a rectangular solid): 2.23 x 10^7 m^3
So unless I made a mistake above, just the nitrogen frost on ONE Pluto, not even accounting for expansion due to lower self-gravity, could build over thirty billion rectangular-solid flying nitrogen frost blocks big enough to carve into full-sized Oumuamuas of the maximum of its estimated dimensions.
Now consider that there are 1.25Ã--10^11 galaxies in the observable universe, and even at only one Pluto-like object per galaxy that's a LOT of nitrogen ice. At another factor of 10^11 stars per galaxy, even if Pluto-like objects are rare there's a few more orders of magnitude to multiply by.
So I think somebody slipped a decimal point somewhere. By a bunch. Can somebody check the numbers above to see whether it's me, rather than the guys at Harvard?
Re: Slipped decimal point? (Like down the ski slo (Score:2)
The actual article is that for it to be a chip off of a terrestrial body that is pure nitrogen, given what we know about planetary formation, is impossible.
The summary is very simplistic and misleading.
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Slashdot Editors are simple and Slashdot is misleading.
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So unless I made a mistake above, just the nitrogen frost on ONE Pluto, not even accounting for expansion due to lower self-gravity, could build over thirty billion rectangular-solid flying nitrogen frost blocks big enough to carve into full-sized Oumuamuas of the maximum of its estimated dimensions.
The authors seem to base their calculations on an earlier published estimate of 'Oumuamua having a 450 million year lifetime and being ejected by a young star.
If I interpreted their paper [arxiv.org] correctly, the first thing to account for is that the nitrogen fragment production rate back then would need to have been 2 orders of magnitude greater than expected in order to explain the rate at which these objects are detected. The second thing is that the estimated sublimation and cosmic ray erosion over that time wou
Space Whales. (Score:2)
It looks like a turd, so it's obviously space whale fecal matter. I mean. It's only logical and obvious!
PSA: The summary sucks (Score:3)
Everybody here is being viscous because they think "LiveScience" knows what they're talking about but the Chair of the Harvard Astrophysics Department doesn't.
Perhaps they have amnesia about Gell-Mann Amnesia?
Anyway, if you track it, it didn't even travel through our solar system - our solar system passed by it. The thing is in the equivalent of a geostationary orbit for our galaxy.
It's super-reflective and would make a good navigational marker even if it's completely natural.
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Anyway, if you track it, it didn't even travel through our solar system - our solar system passed by it. The thing is in the equivalent of a geostationary orbit for our galaxy.
What? The term "geostationary" doesn't make sense for comparison, as galaxies have no equivalent surface for 'Oumuamua to remain facing against, aside from maybe the surface of our galaxy's central black hole Sagittarius A*. But that is spinning incredibly fast in comparison, so there's nothing that can be stationary with regards to that.
Maybe you meant that 'Oumuamua has a near-zero orbital speed around the center of the Milky Way, i.e. that it isn't orbiting around the galaxy like the star systems are, bu
Re: PSA: The summary sucks (Score:1)
The thing is in the equivalent of a geostationary orbit for our galaxy.
Interesting frame of reference you've got there but possibility a wee bit subjective...
Earth has a shitload of Nitrogen (Score:2)
The universe if ... fucking huge. Huge enough and old enough to see many things possible. It is not just possible, but inevitable for a world with as much atmospheric nitrogen as Earth to, say, get knocked off its original orbit and star system, and then freeze its balls off away as it trave
Other origins for N2 chunks? (Score:2)
Astronomy and NASA now obsolete, apparently... (Score:2)
If this argument is true, then these Harvard boys have explored the entire universe and found all that it contains... after all they are apparently able to assert with certainty that there's not enough nitrogen in the ENTIRE UNIVERSE to make an object so small it can barely be seen by people with their most powerful telescopes as it passes near this teensy tiny planet orbiting a tiny insignificant star in an otherwise unremarkable arm of an unremarkable galaxy...
Enough nitrogen to make a thousand oumuamua's
Looking in the wrong place (Score:2)
Pure nitrogen is rare, Siraj said, and has been found only on Pluto ... Even if all of the nitrogen ice in the universe was scraped off every Pluto-like planet that's predicted to exist, there still wouldn't be enough nitrogen to make 'Oumuamua
Maybe the reason that pure nitrogen is rare on planets is because it is mainly found in Oumuamua style objects floating around in the (non-planetary) universe?
The Argument in this Paper is a Mystery (Score:2)
I have read the LiveScience press release (LiveScience is the publisher) and the abstract of the paywalled paper (which I cannot retrieve even using SciHub) so all I know is what it is in these two pieces of text, but the claims as presented are preposterous.
The press release asserts as their conclusion:
Pure nitrogen is rare, Siraj said, and has been found only on Pluto, where it makes up about 0.5% of the total mass. Even if all of the nitrogen ice in the universe was scraped off every Pluto-like planet that's predicted to exist, there still wouldn't be enough nitrogen to make 'Oumuamua.
The mass of Pluto is 1.3*10^22 kg. Using 0.5% as the nitrogen content, we have 6.5*10^19 kg of nitrogen on Pluto. The maximum possible mass of 'Oumuamua, using the values in the press release, is 167*167*80