The 'easyJet ecoJet'¯ would emit 50 percent less CO2 than today's newest ...
Huge Comet Discovered
By SPACE.com Staff
posted: 18 August 2008 11:01 am ET
A huge comet-like object has been spotted inside the orbit of Neptune. The object, at least 30 miles wide, is on the return leg of a 22,500-year journey around the sun, astronomers announced today.
Catalogued as 2006 SQ372, the interloper is just over two billion miles (3.2 billion km) from Earth, though its elongated trek takes it to a distance of 150 billion miles (241 billion km), or nearly 1,600 times the distance from the Earth to the sun.
The only known object with a comparable orbit is Sedna — a distant, Pluto-like dwarf planet discovered in 2003. But 2006 SQ372's travels take it more than 1.5 times farther from the sun. Its diameter is estimated at 30 to 60 miles (50 to 100 km).
"It's basically a comet, but it never gets close enough to the sun to develop a long, bright tail of evaporated gas and dust," said Andrew Becker of the University of Washington. Comet tails form when solar energy boils material off a comet.
The object is not a threat to Earth, which is good. A comet that size would cause global devastation. The space rock that contributed to the demise of dinosaurs 65 million years ago was about 6 miles (10 km) wide. The comet Hale-Bopp, which put on a spectacular display in the late 1990s, is about 31 miles (50 km) in diameter. Yet many comets are just a mile or two wide.
Becker's team found 2006 SQ372 by applying a computer searching algorithm to data taken from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey II (SDSS II), which is tasked with finding supernova explosions billions of light-years away to measure the expansion of the universe. In the survey, the Apache Point Observatory telescope scanned the same long stripe of sky, an area 1,000 times larger than the full moon in the sky, every clear night in the fall of 2005, 2006 and 2007.
As to how 2006 SQ372 got its unusual orbit, University of Washington graduate student Nathan Kaib, another member of the discovery team, has some ideas based on his computer simulations of the object.
"It could have formed, like Pluto, in the belt of icy debris beyond Neptune, then been kicked to large distance by a gravitational encounter with Neptune or Uranus," Kaib said. "However, we think it is more probable that SQ372 comes from the inner edge of the Oort Cloud."
The Oort Cloud is a huge spherical cloud surrounding the solar system. It extends about 18 trillion miles (30 trillion kilometers) from the sun and was first proposed in 1950 by Dutch astronomer Jan Oort.
The discovery was reported today in Chicago, at an international symposium titled "The Sloan Digital Sky Survey: Asteroids to Cosmology." The researchers plan to submit details of the finding for publication in the Astrophysical Journal.
Related Items from the LiveScience Store
-
Waterproof Action Camera $114.95
-
Cube World, Chief & Sparky $24.95
More Stores to Explore
Most Popular
- Recommended
- Commented
- God and Evolution Can Co-exist, Scientist Says
- The Physics of Teardrops
- Gremlins Thought Extinct, Found After 85 Years
- Smoking's Many Myths Examined
- Clean People Are Less Judgmental
- First 3-D Images Inside Human Arteries
- Origin of Sex Pinned Down
- Fore! Here Comes the Ultimate Golf Ball
- Grave Reveals Violent Death of Ancient Family
- Taboo Lifts on Sex in Nursing Homes
- God and Evolution Can Co-exist, Scientist Says
- Intelligent Design: An Ambiguous Assault on Evolution
- The Human Soul: An Ancient Idea
- People Said to Believe in Aliens and Ghosts More Than God
- Gremlins Thought Extinct, Found After 85 Years
- Top 5 Most Unusual Big-Screen Vampires
- First Known Turtle Had Shell Shortcomings
- British Science Minister Claims Sixth Sense
- Extinct Woolly Mammoth's DNA Mapped
- Painful Labor: A Modern Thing
Animals
Marketplace Links
- Meet the HP ProLiant DL385 G5
- The HP ProLiant DL385 G5 server helps reduce resources and lets you manage systems-or collaborate-remotely
- Science. Technology. Sustainability.
- Visit the new Innovation Channel on LiveScience.com.
- One-stop destination for the lowest domestic airfares
- Search all airlines, including Southwest now!
- Get a free brochure
- Go exploring with the best ice team on earth. Polar bears or penguins? Choose now! expeditions.com/ice
- HP
- The HP portfolio of server solutions helps you push the envelope-without pushing your budget to the brink. ProLiant technology, affordably priced.
- LiveScience Store
- Find everything from weird science to cool gadgets!
- Don't toss it, Recycle it!
- Find local recycling centers now
- Feel Strongly About Energy Options?
- Speak your mind about technologies and innovations in our forums.
- BP
- There’s energy security in energy diversity.
- Facing a Dilemma? Let Geek Logik help.
- Use Algebra to inform your decisions
- HP
- Protect and store your business's critical data with HP All-in-One and Disk-Based backup systems



