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Scientists say cigar-shaped interstellar object not an alien spaceship


Scientists tracked the reddish-colored Oumuamua from Oct. 14, 2017, until Jan. 2, 2018, after which it became too faint to detect even using the most powerful telescopes. After investigating the nature of a mysterious and apparently cigar-shaped object called Oumuamua spotted in 2017 speeding through our solar system, astronomers remain uncertain over how to classify it but are confident it is not an alien spaceship.

Its odd shape and motion had prompted some scientists to wonder whether Oumuamua, the first object from another star system found passing through our solar system was some sort of alien technology perhaps exploring the cosmos. But after poring over the data, an international team of researchers wrote that we find no compelling evidence to favor an alien explanation.

Scientists tracked the reddish-colored Oumuamua from Oct. 14, 2017, until Jan. 2, 2018, after which it became too faint to detect even using the most powerful telescopes. It is estimated to be a half-mile (800 meters) long, tumbling through space. 

University of Maryland astronomer Matthew Knight, co-leader of the research published in the Nature Astronomy said, our key finding is that Oumuamua's properties are consistent with a natural origin, and an alien explanation is unwarranted. Yes, if it made a sudden, unexplainable turn that would certainly have warranted further exploration.

Oumuamua (pronounced oh-MOO-uh-MOO-uh) was first detected by the University of Hawaii's Pan-STARRS1 telescope. Its name in the native Hawaiian language means a messenger arriving from a great distance.

Knight said it is not easy to fit Oumuamua into familiar classifications such as a comet or asteroid. We have tried to avoid putting it in one of those boxes and prefer to call it more generically an object. In simple terms, asteroids are rocky and devoid of ice, while comets are a mixture of rock and ice, so-called dirty snowballs.

Oumuamua was somehow ejected from a distant star system, traversing through interstellar space and through our solar system. It deviated slightly from a path that would be explained purely by the Sun's gravitational pull because of what some researchers said was apparently a very small emission of gas from its surface, indicative of a comet, though any such emission was so slight as to be undetected. It lacked a dust tail or gas jets, characteristic of comets.

The researchers wrote that a straightforward explanation for Oumuamua is that it is a planetesimal a planetary building block or a fragment of one formed in a faraway star system.

Its composition remains a mystery, including whether it is just rock or includes some metal or other ingredients. It is currently located beyond Saturn, dashing out of our solar system.

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