[astro] when worlds collide II
Eugen Leitl
<eugen at leitl.org> on
Wed Sep 24 17:45:58 CEST 2008
http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/080923-worlds-collide.html
Oh, My! When Worlds Really Collide
By Robert Roy Britt
Senior Science Writer
posted: 23 September 2008
05:01 pm ET
Around a distant star, two planets similar to Earth collided and were
destroyed, astronomers said today.
The somewhat speculative scenario is based on the leftovers: a ring of debris
around the star that includes a million times more dust than now circles our
sun.
"It's as if Earth and Venus collided," said researcher Benjamin Zuckerman,
UCLA professor of physics and astronomy. "Astronomers have never seen
anything like this before. Apparently, major catastrophic collisions can take
place in a fully mature planetary system."
The researchers used X-ray data and other observations of a star called BD+20
307. They had assumed it was a young star, just a few hundred million years
old, and the debris was leftovers from planet formation. But earlier this
year, another study showed the star was actually a binary pair, and that the
stars were billions of years old.
So why all the debris? The dust is about the same distance from the stellar
pair as Earth is from the sun, and given current theories of planet
formation, that debris should have been swept up into planets by now or
pushed away by stellar radiation. It simply shouldn't be there.
A colossal collision must have created all that dust sometime in the past few
hundred thousand years and perhaps much more recently, the astronomers
figure.
It would have been a whopper.
"If any life was present on either planet, the massive collision would have
wiped out everything in a matter of minutes â€" the ultimate extinction
event," said Gregory Henry, an astronomer at Tennessee State University (TSU)
who worked with Zuckerman on the research. "A massive disk of
infrared-emitting dust circling the star provides silent testimony to this
sad fate."
To put the collision into context, Zuckerman said: "By contrast with the
massive crash in the BD+20 307 system, the collision of an asteroid with
Earth 65 million years ago, the most favored explanation for the final demise
of the dinosaurs, was a mere pipsqueak."
The work was funded by the National Science Foundation and NASA, and also by
TSU and the State of Tennessee. It will be detailed in the December issue of
the Astrophysical Journal.
The conclusion has the astronomers thinking about home.
"This poses two very interesting questions," said TSU astronomer Francis
Fekel. "How do planetary orbits become destabilized in such an old, mature
system, and could such a collision happen in our own solar system?"
It has already happened here, in fact. Our moon is thought to have been
created when a Mars-sized object slammed into Earth. Henry points out that
computer models done by other researchers suggest that as planets in our
solar system migrate over time, there is a "small probability for collisions
of Mercury with Earth or Venus sometime in the next billion years or more."
Of course by then the sun will have expanded and we might be toast anyway.
More information about the astro
mailing list