HomeAmericaInterstellar comet 3I/ATLAS found to be up to 12 billion years old

Interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS found to be up to 12 billion years old

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By Will Dunham

WASHINGTON, June 22 (Reuters) - Scientists studying the comet ‌3I/ATLAS have determined that this interstellar visitor is remarkably ancient – formed an estimated 10 to 12 billion years ago in ​a primordial planetary system – and has a composition unlike anything in our solar system.

An evaluation of the chemical make-up of 3I/ATLAS – only the third interstellar object ever spotted in the solar system – provided guidance about the ⁠physical and chemical conditions in the planetary system where it formed, the researchers said.

The comet, which has a diameter of around 1.6 miles (2.6 km), is probably the oldest-known object to venture through the solar system, according to Martin Cordiner, a planetary scientist and astrochemist working at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland and lead author of the ​study published on Monday in the journal Nature.

The researchers said that 3I/ATLAS appears to have been born in a much colder environment – roughly minus-405 degrees Fahrenheit (minus-243 degrees Celsius) – than the one in which Earth and ‌other bodies in our solar system formed roughly 4.5 billion years ago. They said it has traveled a vast distance since it was somehow expelled from its home planetary system.

"We have never before seen an object like 3I/ATLAS," Cordiner said.

The researchers measured the ratio of isotopes – different versions of chemical elements such as hydrogen and carbon – observed on 3I/ATLAS using the ⁠James Webb Space Telescope.

Its hydrogen isotopes offered evidence about temperature and radiation in the environment in which 3I/ATLAS formed. Its carbon isotope ratios offered ⁠clues about the composition of the interstellar gas cloud that gave rise to 3I/ATLAS and its home planetary system.

The comet's water contained about 30 times more deuterium - a hydrogen isotope – than other comets in the solar system. Its carbon isotope ratios differed from those seen in objects in the solar system and in interstellar clouds and planet-forming disks of material around newborn stars relatively nearby.

Cordiner said 3I/ATLAS likely is a fragment left over from the planetary formation process around another star.

"Our James Webb Space Telescope observations tell us that the planet-forming ‌environment of 3I/ATLAS's host system was distinct from our own solar system. It was likely colder, and less metal rich, while being more heavily irradiated by UV and ⁠cosmic rays," Cordiner said.

'ELEMENTS FOR LIFE'

Nevertheless, 3I/ATLAS is rich in organic molecules including those bearing carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen and sulfur. ‌This, according to Cordiner, "shows that despite a cold and distant origin, the volatile elements for life as we ​know it were abundant in this distant planet-forming disk."

The carbon composition indicated that 3I/ATLAS formed as much as 12 billion years ago during a period of intense star formation in its region. The universe is thought to have begun with the Big Bang event about 13.8 billion years ago, meaning 3I/ATLAS would date to a time when the ‌cosmos was only about 13% of its current age.

The researchers believe 3I/ATLAS formed in the Milky Way, but based on ​its age cannot rule out an origin in another galaxy.

"I had anticipated that ⁠intergalactic distances were too vast, but in fact it could take as little as a billion years for a fast interstellar object to get here ‌from our nearest galactic neighbors, the Magellanic Clouds," Cordiner said.

3I/ATLAS may have been hurled from its home ⁠planetary system due to gravitational interactions with planets, though a collision of some sort also is considered a possibility.

The two other interstellar objects previously observed journeying through the solar system were comets called 1I/'Oumuamua, detected in 2017, and 2I/Borisov, discovered in 2019.

3I/ATLAS is now approaching the orbit of the planet Saturn and is expected to pass beyond the dwarf ​planet Pluto's orbit in 2029 and exit the solar system's ‌outer boundary in around 2035.

The researchers are confident 3I/ATLAS is a natural object, despite some speculation last year by others that it was an alien spacecraft.

"While good scientists always remain ⁠open to updating their understanding, we take great care to weigh the evidence for ​each hypothesis," Cordiner said. "In this case, the evidence was clear from a very early stage that we were looking at a comet-like object, and over time that ​interpretation has been confirmed by subsequent observations."

(Reporting by Will DunhamEditing by Bill Berkrot)

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