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Dark comet

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Class of asteroids
Not to be confused withDarkComet.

Dark comets are a class ofasteroids that exhibit some behavior consistent withcomets, but do not grow a comet's tail or produce a coma, making them visually appear asasteroids. They are distinguished from other asteroids by their non-gravitational acceleration, which causes them to deviate from their expectedorbital path. Dark comets were first identified as a distinct class of objects in 2023.[1] They mostly fall into two families, the outer dark comets, and the inner dark comets, which are distinguished by their size and orbital characteristics.[2]

Discovery

[edit]

The first object that exhibited “dark comet” behavior was a‘Oumuamua, an interstellar object discovered in 2017, which was found to exhibit “non-gravitational acceleration,” that is too strong to be explained by theYarkovsky effect or solar radiation pressure.[3] What made this notable was that, while this is typical of comets, observations by theSpitzer Space Telescope did not find any cometary activity.[3][1]As astrophysicist Darryl Seligman put it, “It moved like a comet, but didn't have the classic coma, or tail, of a comet.”

Since the unexplained acceleration is away from the direction of the sun, the scientists hypothesized that the acceleration is produced by outgassing from the sunlit side of the surface.[3]

A team of astronomers began searching the asteroid belt for more objects that behaved the same way. By 2024, astronomers had identified 14 asteroids that moved like comets.[4] These were divided into two families.[4]The outer family was made up of larger asteroids, measuring hundreds of meters or more, and seemed to reflect more light. They had larger orbits, resembling those ofJupiter-family comets, which pass near Jupiter's orbit ataphelion. The inner family asteroids were smaller, all 50 meters or less in diameter, and had more circular orbits.

Exploration

[edit]

Japan'sHayabusa2 mission was already set to rendezvous with asteroid1998 KY26, before astronomers had even identified it as a dark comet. The encounter will take place in July 2031. Astronomers see this as an excellent opportunity to learn more about why dark comets behave the way they do.[4]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abSeligman, Darryl Z. (2023-02-15)."Dark Comets? Unexpectedly Large Nongravitational Accelerations on a Sample of Small Asteroids".The Planetary Science Journal. 4, Number 2.doi:10.3847/PSJ/acb697.hdl:10150/674306. Retrieved2025-07-13.
  2. ^Seligman, Darryl Z.; Farnocchia, Davide; et al. (2024-12-09)."Two distinct populations of dark comets delineated by orbits and sizes".Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.1.doi:10.1073/pnas.2406424121.PMC 11665882. Retrieved2025-07-13.
  3. ^abcHoang, Thiem; Loeb, Abraham (2020-08-17)."Destruction of Molecular Hydrogen Ice and Implications for 1I/2017 U1 ('Oumuamua)".The Astrophysical Journal Letters. 899, Number 2.arXiv:2006.08088.doi:10.3847/2041-8213/abab0c. Retrieved2025-07-13.
  4. ^abc"Dark Comets".Scientific American (May 2025):58–63. 2025-05-01. Retrieved2025-07-13.
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