"And I beheld, and heard the voice of one eagle flying through the midst of heaven, saying with a loud voice: Woe, woe, woe to the inhabitants of the earth.... [Apocalypse (Revelation) 8:13]
Wednesday, October 19, 2016
Are ‘dark comets’ the most dangerous threat to Earth in the universe?
Are ‘dark comets’ the most dangerous threat to Earth in the universe?
There are many cosmic catastrophes that
could do us in, completely irrespective of anything that happens here
on Earth. A star could pass into our Solar System and swallow up our
planet whole, or eject us from our orbit and cause us to permanently
freeze over. A supernova or gamma ray burst could go off too close to
us, disintegrating all life on the Earth’s surface. Or, as we know it
did at least once before some 65 million years ago, a large, fast-moving
object like a comet or asteroid could have a catastrophic collision
with Earth. At least if we’re prepared, we ought to see one coming and
be able to take preparations. But what if there’s no chance; what if an
incoming comet is somehow unseeable? David Bertone heard about that
possibility, and wants to know!
I recently came across a few articles
regarding dark comets, and to say the least it freaked me out! […] Is
Napier right about the dark comets? Are they truly a threat to us [on]
earth? We have lots of threats to life on Earth, and getting struck by a
large, fast-moving, unexpected object is certainly among them! Bill
Napier is a scientist who studies potentially hazardous objects from
outer space. He rightly points out that, while most efforts to catalogue
the potential dangers to Earth focus on near-Earth objects like the
asteroids that leave the main belt and cross Earth’s orbit, that might
not be a good reflection of what’s actually likely to get us. Nor is it
necessarily an asteroid orbiting interior to Jupiter or a comet orbiting
exterior to the orbit of Neptune, just waiting to get perturbed and
flung into the inner Solar System. There are plenty of objects orbiting
in between the orbits of the four gas giants, known as centaurs, that
could be hurtled inwards without any warning, and most of them have not
been catalogued. Napier postulates that many of these centaurs may be
invisible to us, even after being flung inwards, until it’s far too
late.
But this brings up an important
question: what could render a comet dark, or otherwise unseeable? It
isn’t simply going to be a comet that comes towards us from the outer
Solar System that’s terrible at reflecting light. Sure, a centaur could
have had all its volatile ices boiled off over billions of years,
reducing its reflectivity tremendously. As obvious as that seems, the
amount of light the Sun emits is so extreme that even a medium-sized
comet (or centaur) that absorbed 99.9% of the Sun’s light would still be
easily visible at the distance of Saturn. Moreover, comets tend to be
made up of mostly ices, which are highly reflective and which get
brought to the surface as a comet heats up. The only thoroughly ”dark”
bodies in our Solar System are more like our Moon, which still reflects
light very brightly, as any casual watcher of the night sky will tell
you. An object that was as dark as any naturally occurring, abundant
element or compound would still be visible from its reflected sunlight,
particularly if you looked in the infrared portion of the spectrum.
But there are other possibilities to
consider. What if an incoming, highly reflective comet were oriented
bizarrely? What if it was quite icy, but reflected all the sunlight that
struck it away from Earth, like some kind of strange crystal? It’s less
obvious, but that wouldn’t work, either. When an object like that
entered the planet-containing portion of the Solar System, it would heat
up. Heat acting on the ices causes the development of a long tail that
points away from the Sun, and this will be easily observable from one of
many professional or even amateur all-sky surveys before too much time
has passed.
But perhaps nature will conspire to
make that tail unseeable from our point of view? In order for the tail
to be hidden, the incoming comet would need to be directed straight at
us, aligned so that the Sun, the Earth and the comet made a straight
line. If the tail points directly away from us and is hidden behind the
comet, that would render everything invisible, and we wouldn’t be able
to see it, right? Unfortunately, that’s wrong, too. Comet tails don’t
simply point away from the Sun, they spread outwards away from a comet.
Even a “head-on” comet like this would have a visible coma around it.
Again, amateur or professional astronomers would catch this quickly. But
there is a real danger of an invisible comet, and it’s very different
from the form that Napier envisions in any of his scenario. Imagine, if
you will, that a bright, reflective, tail-and-coma-containing comet were
headed right for us. Is there any direction it could approach us that
you can think of that would render it completely unable to be seen?
There is: from the direction of the Sun.
Telescopes don’t dare point too close
to the Sun, even from space, since even a glimmer of direct sunlight
will ruin and fry your optical system. If any object — comet, asteroid,
centaur, even a kicked-up fragment from a collision with Mercury —
either approached the Sun from behind it (from our perspective) or were
sling-shotted around it, the right trajectory could send it hurtling
towards Earth. This is part of the reason why having NASA’s STEREO
satellites online is so important.
At this point, the technology to
deflect an incoming asteroid or comet a significant amount in a short
amount of time hasn’t been developed, but at least by having a set of
observatories at different locations in the Solar System, we could see
everything that was headed for us. In the future, more sensitive
infrared all-sky surveys will make a far more complete census of the
centaurs in our Solar System, and the launch of WFIRST in the 2020s will
help us map potentially hazardous objects to much greater distances
than we’ve presently done. But the odds of a distant object being hurled
into us after being perturbed for the first time are exceedingly small;
the much scarier prospect is of a long-period comet being kicked
ever-so-slightly into Earth’s orbital path.
Comet Swift-Tuttle, which gave rise to
the Perseids, is the single most dangerous object known to humanity, and
has a chance to impact us with more than 20 times the energy of the
legendary dinosaur-killer in the 4400s. But we’ve got plenty of time
until that might happen. In the meanwhile, take heart in the fact that
except for Sun-directed asteroids and comets, we can see everything
large that could come headed our way. And if we’re lucky enough to make
it as a civilization for another thousand years or so, our technology
will likely have advanced to the point where perhaps asteroid/comet
deflection isn’t such a daunting task after all!