海角大神

Comet struck Neptune 200 years ago, researchers find

A comet struck the planet Neptune some 200 years ago, leaving a blotch of carbon monoxide in the upper atmosphere.

|
NASA/AP
This image of Neptune was taken in August, 1989, as Voyager 2 photographed the planet almost continuously. The gas giant was struck by a comet some 200 years ago, researchers have found.

Researchers studying 's atmosphere found evidence that a may have hit the about two centuries ago. Was this a "cold-case" file re-opened, or did they discover a way to back in time to witness a long-ago event? To make the discovery, a team from the Max Planck Institute for System Research actually used the Herschel 's PACS (Photodetector Array Camera and Spectrometer) instrument, along with what was learned from observations from when the Shoemaker-Levy 9 hit sixteen years ago.

The 1994 impact on was watched and documented by Voyager 2, Galileo and Ulysses, and today this data helps scientists detect cometary impacts that happened many, many years ago. In fact, just in February of this year, scientists from Max Planck discovered strong evidence for a on about 230 years ago. These "dirty snowballs" leave traces of water, carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, hydrocyanic acid, and carbon sulfide in the atmosphere of the . These molecules can be detected in the radiation the planet radiates into space.

So, the team turned their attention to Neptune, and used the PACS to analyze the long-wave radiation of Neptune.

The mainly consists of hydrogen and helium with traces of water, carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide. However, the scientists detected an unusual distribution of carbon monoxide in the stratosphere, the upper layer of the atmosphere, and found a higher concentration than in the layer beneath, the . "The higher concentration of carbon monoxide in the stratosphere can only be explained by an external origin," said MPS-scientist Paul Hartogh, principle investigator of the Herschel science program. "Normally, the concentrations of carbon monoxide in troposphere and stratosphere should be the same or decrease with increasing height," he said.

Another theory suggested that a constant flux of tiny dust particles from space introduces carbon monoxide into Neptune鈥檚 atmosphere. However, the newest observations from PACS does not lend credence to that idea, and the team concluded the only explanation for these results is a cometary impact. Such a collision forces the comet to fall apart while the carbon monoxide trapped in the comet鈥檚 ice is released and over the years distributed throughout the stratosphere.

"From the distribution of carbon monoxide we can therefore derive the approximate time, when the impact took place," said Thibault Cavali茅 from MPS, which showed the impact was about 200 years ago.

PACS was developed at the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial , and it analyzes the long-wave infrared radiation, also known as heat radiation, that the cold bodies in space such as Neptune emit.

Source:

Nancy Atkinson blogs at .

View all Universe Today posts on the Monitor.

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.

海角大神 has assembled a diverse group of the best astronomy-related bloggers out there. Our guest bloggers are not employed or directed by the Monitor and the views expressed are the bloggers' own, as is responsibility for the content of their blogs. To contact us about a blogger, click here.

QR Code to Comet struck Neptune 200 years ago, researchers find
Read this article in
/Science/Cool-Astronomy/2010/0721/Comet-struck-Neptune-200-years-ago-researchers-find
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe