Astronomers have reported the discovery of a star that passed within the
outer reaches of our Solar System just 70,000 years ago, when early
humans were beginning to take a foothold here on Earth. The stellar
flyby was likely close enough to have influenced the orbits of comets in
the outer Oort Cloud, but Neandertals and Cro Magnons – our early
ancestors – were not in danger. But now astronomers are ready to look
for more stars like this one.
A binary star system Credit: Michael Osadciw/University of Rochester |
Lead author Eric Mamajek from the University of Rochester and collaborators report in The Closest Known Flyby Of A Star To The Solar System (published
in Astrophysical Journal on February 12, 2015) that “the flyby of this
system likely caused negligible impact on the flux of long-period
comets, the recent discovery of this binary highlights that dynamically
important Oort Cloud perturbers may be lurking among nearby stars.”
The star, named Scholz’s star, was just 8/10ths of a light year at
closest approach to the Sun. In comparison, the nearest known star to
the Sun is Proxima Centauri at 4.2 light years.
While the internet has been rife with threads and accusations of a
Nemesis star that is approaching the inner Solar System and is somehow
being “hidden” by NASA, this small red dwarf star with a companion
represents the real thing.
In 1984, the paleontologists David Raup and Jack Sepkoski postulated
that a dim dwarf star, now widely known on the internet as the Nemesis
Star, was in a very long period Solar orbit. The elliptical orbit
brought the proposed star into the inner Solar System every 26 million
years, causing a rain of comets and mass extinctions on that time
period. By no coincidence, because of the sheer numbers of red dwarfs
throughout the galaxy, Scholz’s star nearly fits such a scenario.
Nemesis was proposed to be in a orbit extending 95,000 A.U. compared to
Scholz’s nearest flyby distance of 50,000 A.U. Recent studies of impact
rates on Earth, the Moon and Mars have discounted the existence of a Nemesis star (see New Impact Rate Count Lays Nemesis Theory to Rest, Universe Today, 8/1/2011)
But Scholz’s star — a real-life Oort Cloud perturber — was a small
red dwarf star star with a M9 spectral classification. M-class stars are
the most common star in our galaxy and likely the whole Universe, as
75% of all stars are of this type. Scholz’s is just 15% of the mass of
our Sun. Furthermore, Scholz’s is a binary star system with the
secondary being a brown dwarf of class T5. Brown Dwarfs are believed to
be plentiful in the Universe but due to their very low intrinsic
brightness, they are very difficult to discover … except, as in this
case, as companions to brighter stars.
The astronomers reported that their survey
of new astrometric data of nearby stars identified Scholz’s as an
object of interest. The star’s transverse velocity was very low, that
is, the stars sideways motion. Additionally, they recognized that its
radial velocity – motion towards or away from us, was quite high. For
Scholz’s, the star was speeding directly away from our Solar System. How
close could Scholz’s star have been to our system in the past? They
needed more accurate data.
The collaborators turned to two large telescopes in the southern
hemisphere. Spectrographs were employed on the Southern African Large
Telescope (SALT) in South Africa and the Magellan telescope at Las
Campanas Observatory, Chile. With more accurate trangental and radial
velocities, the researchers were able to calculate the trajectory,
accounting for the Sun’s and Scholz’s motion around the Milky Way
galaxy.
Scholz’s star is an active star and the researchers added that while
it was nearby, it shined at a dimly of about 11th magnitude but
eruptions and flares on its surface could have raised its brightness to
visible levels and could have been seen as a “new” star by primitive
humans of the time.
The relative sizes of the inner Solar System, Kuiper Belt and the Oort Cloud. (Credit: NASA, William Crochot) |
At present, Scholz’s star is 20 light years away, one of the 70
closest stars to our Solar System. However, the astronomers calculated,
with a 98% certainty, that Scholz’s passed within 0.5 light years,
approximately 50,000 Astronomical Units (A.U.) of the Sun.
An A.U. is the mean distance from the Earth to the Sun and 50,000 is
an important mile marker in our Solar System. It is the outer reaches of
the Oort Cloud where billions of comets reside in cold storage, in
orbits that take hundreds of thousands of years to circle the Sun.
With this first extraordinary close encounter discovered, the
collaborators of this paper as well as other researchers are planning
new searches for “Nemesis” type stars. The Large Synoptic Survey
Telescope (LSST) and other telescopes within the next decade will bring
an incredible array of data sets that will uncover many more red dwarf,
brown dwarf and possibly orphan planets roaming in nearby space. Some of
these could likewise be traced to past or future near misses to the Sun
and Earth system.
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