On October 19, 2017, astronomers made the first-ever detection of an
interstellar object (ISO) passing through our solar system. Designated
1I/2017 U1 ′Oumuamua, this object confounded astronomers who could not
determine if it was an interstellar comet or an asteroid. After four years
and many theories (including the controversial "ET solar sail" hypothesis),
the astronomical community appeared to land on an explanation that satisfied
all the observations.
The "nitrogen iceberg" theory stated that "Oumuamua was likely debris from a
Pluto-like planet in another stellar system. In their latest study, titled
"The Mass Budget Necessary to Explain "Oumuamua as a Nitrogen Iceberg," Amir
Siraj and Prof. Avi Loeb (who proposed the ET solar sail hypothesis) offered
an official counter-argument to this theory. According to their new paper,
there is an extreme shortage of exo-Plutos in the galaxy to explain the
detection of a nitrogen iceberg.
In the paper where he broached the possibility, Loeb indicated that
"Oumuamua's unusual character and behavior were consistent with a solar
sail. This included the highly-reflective nature of the object and its
profile, which appeared to be either cigar-shaped or pancake-like. More
importantly, its sudden acceleration and deviation from its expected orbit
appeared to be the result of radiation pressure, which is precisely how
solar sails achieve propulsion.
There was also the way it entered our solar system, which allowed it to make
a flyby of Earth after passing closest to our sun (perihelion). In other
words, its orbital dynamics allowed it to get a close look at the only
habitable planet in our solar system, which is precisely what one might
expect of an interstellar probe. These arguments were detailed further in
Loeb's book, "Extraterrestrial: The First Sign of Intelligent Life Beyond
Earth."
At the time of the book's writing, all attempts to explain "Oumuamua in
terms of natural phenomena fell short. Basically, there was no single
explanation that could account for its brightness, profile and acceleration
while acknowledging that there was no evidence of outgassing. In addition,
the sudden acceleration could not be attributed to gravitational forces
since these should have been slowing "Oumuamua down at the time.
In March of 2021, two researchers from the School of Earth and Space
Exploration (SESE) at Arizona State University (ASU) offered a new
hypothesis. In two published studies, SESE Exploration Fellow Alan Jackson
and Professor Steven Desch argued that "Oumuamua may have been a nitrogen
ice fragment ejected from a young star system (possibly in the Perseus Arm
of our galaxy) ca. 400 to 500 million years ago.
In their first paper, Jackson and Desch addressed the size and compositional
constraints of "Oumuamua and showed that "Oumuamua's albedo was similar to
the nitrogen ices on the surfaces of Triton and Pluto. In their second
paper, they showed how these types of nitrogen ice fragments could be
generated by the collision of extrasolar objects similar in composition to
Pluto and Kuiper Belt Object (KBOs).
By their estimates, these collisions would generate and eject around 100
trillion (~1014) objects into interstellar space, half of which
would be composed of water ice and the other half of nitrogen
(N2). This population would be enough to satisfy the statistical
significance of ISOs necessary to explain the detection of "Oumaumua.
Equally important was the fact that an object composed of
N2 would not form a tail as it neared our sun, as there
would be no water vapor or CO/CO2 to sublimate. As Siraj
explained to Universe Today via email:
"The attraction of the nitrogen iceberg hypothesis is primarily in
explaining "Oumuamua's non-gravitational acceleration. Just like for a
hypothetical hydrogen iceberg, a nitrogen iceberg's outgassing activity
would not have been detectable in the measurements that were taken of
"Oumuamua by the Spitzer Space Telescope, which simply limited the abundance
of carbon-based molecules around "Oumuamua. As a result, the sublimation of
material could conceivably power the object's observed non-gravitational
acceleration."
One of the main points made by Loeb in his proposal paper was that
regardless of "Oumuamua's true nature, its detection implied a massive
population of similar objects in our galaxy. In their rebuttal paper, which
was recently accepted for publication in the journal New Astronomy, Siraj
and Loeb addressed whether there is enough material in the Milky Way galaxy
to create such a population of nitrogen icebergs.
A consequence of Jackson and Desch's assessment was that there must be a
robust population of "exo-Plutos" in our galaxy. For that to be the case,
stars in the Milky Way would need to have enough material left over from
star formation (i.e., a mass budget) to accommodate the formation of these
planets. To test this, Siraj and Loeb took the nitrogen iceberg model and
examined what amount of stellar material is required to make it work.
"Our calculation is very straightforward," said Siraj. "We take all of the
nitrogen iceberg model parameters, the required abundance of "Oumuamua-like
objects to explain its detection by Pan-STARRS, and basic facts about stars
in the galaxy, and derive from these values the total mass of solar
metallicity material required to be converted into exo-Plutos, to make the
nitrogen model plausible."
What they found was that even under the most optimistic assumptions
possible, the model fails by several orders of magnitude. In short, a star
system would not have enough nitrogen ice to allow for such a robust
population of exo-Plutos, which means that statistically, there simply
cannot be enough ISOs composed of N2 to account for the
fortuitous detection of "Oumuamua.
The model becomes even more unlikely when one considers how cosmic rays
naturally erode ISOs. According to other recently published research, this
process imposes a much shorter lifespan on ISOs than previously thought.
Siraj says, "The primary issue with a nitrogen iceberg model is that
producing the required population of such objects would require more than
ten times the entire mass of stars in the Milky Way galaxy to be converted
directly into exo-Plutos—and when we properly account for inevitable cosmic
ray erosion of nitrogen icebergs, we need a thousand times the galaxy's
stellar mass. These numbers render the nitrogen model untenable, since only
a small fraction of the stellar mass in the galaxy goes towards the
production of exo-Plutos."
In addition, Siraj and Loeb cite research that appeared shortly after their
study appeared on the arXiv that casts doubt on the prevalence of nitrogen
icebergs in our galaxy. In a study titled "Constraints on the Occurrence of
"Oumuamua-Like Objects," which appeared in the October issue of Bulletin of
the American Astronomical Society, authors Levine et al. argue that both the
hydrogen iceberg and nitrogen iceberg hypotheses suffer from critical flaws.
Whereas the temperature requirements for the former theory make it
untenable, the necessary formation efficiency does the same for the latter.
In the end, they also determined that the mechanism for producing
N2 ice fragments (impacts on extrasolar Kuiper Belt analogs)
was insufficient to create objects as large as "Oumuamua, and several orders
of magnitude too low to create a population of 1014 objects.
What does this mean for "Oumuamua and the more "exotic" explanation of its
origin—i.e., that it might have been an ET solar sail? For starters, it does
not mean "it was aliens," nor is anyone in the astronomical community making
that assertion. But it does mean that this latest attempt to explain
"Oumuamua in terms of natural phenomena does not fit all of the
requirements—contrary to what many suspected previously.
"The nitrogen model is now off the table," said Siraj. "This means that the
"Oumuamua mystery remains wide open, motivating even more strongly the study
of objects like "Oumuamua in the future. This is the goal of the
interstellar object branch of the Galileo Project, which I have the
privilege of leading—to discover and characterize objects like "Oumuamua,
and ultimately to understand their nature."
The Galileo Project (described in a previous article) is a non-profit
research initiative founded by Prof. Loeb and Frank H. Laukien, a visiting
scholar to Harvard University and the Chairman, President, and CEO of the
Bruker Corporation (a manufacturer of scientific instruments). This
multi-national, multi-institutional project is made of volunteer experts,
including Amir Siraj as its director of interstellar object studies.
Together, they are working to bring the search for extraterrestrial
intelligence (SETI) and technosignatures into the mainstream. They are
joined by astronomers and observatories worldwide that are looking forward
to the next few years when next-generation observatories will become
operational in the coming years. This includes the Vera C. Rubin Observatory
(formerly the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope), which is finishing
construction in Chile and is expected to commence operations sometime next
year (or possibly 2023).
Using its 8.4-meter (27 foot) mirror and 3200-megapixel camera, this
observatory will conduct a 10-year survey, during which time it will observe
an estimated 37 billion stars and galaxies. The Rubin Observatory will also
explore our solar system and provide regular alerts concerning
newly-discovered objects, including an estimated 5 ISOs a month. NASA and
the ESA are also developing missions that will rendezvous with ISOs in the
near future and study them up close.
Once again, the true nature and origins of "Oumuamua's have confounded
explanation. In many ways, this is good news. If there is one thing the
entire astronomical community can agree on, it's the fact that "Oumuamua
represents a class of previously-unknown objects. The fact that such objects
pass through our solar system regularly (and that some end up staying)
presents immense opportunities for future study.
To put it in TL:DR terms, we're not saying it was aliens. But either way, we
are sure to find out very soon.
Reference:
Amir Siraj, Abraham Loeb, The Mass Budget Necessary to Explain `Oumuamua as
a Nitrogen Iceberg. arXiv:2103.14032v4 [astro-ph.EP],
arxiv.org/abs/2103.14032
Tags:
Space & Astrophysics