The story of 'Oumuamua, the first visitor from another star system | Karen J. Meech | TED

7,246,629 views ・ 2018-07-19

TED


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NASA's always on the lookout for possible asteroid collision hazards,
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so the Pan-STARRS telescope is scanning the sky every night.
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Each morning, candidate objects are examined by Pan-STARRS staff
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and usually discovered to be no big deal.
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But on October 19, 2017,
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Pan-STARRS spotted an object moving rapidly between the stars,
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and this time the usual follow-up measurements of position and speed
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showed something completely different.
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By October 22nd, we had enough data
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to realize that this object wasn't from our solar system.
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Holy cow.
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That's when I got the phone call,
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the phone call that all solar system astronomers are waiting for.
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Let me tell you how exciting this was.
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(Laughter)
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NASA's been expecting to see an interstellar comet
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pass through the solar system since the 1970s,
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but until now, we'd never seen anything.
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Our own solar system is huge,
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so even getting a package from the nearest star system
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4.4 light years away
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would take over 50,000 years.
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So this is a really big deal.
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The interstellar visitor entered our solar system
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from above the plane of the planets,
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coming from the direction of the constellation Lyra,
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and it passed closest to the Sun on September 9th,
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passing inside the orbit of Mercury.
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Now this isn't a particularly close approach or unusual distance.
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It's just much easier to see objects close by.
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On October 14th,
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before we discovered it, it made its closest approach to the Earth,
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within about 15 million miles.
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This is really close by astronomical standards.
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Now rather than call this by its unwieldy catalog name,
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we briefly called it "Rama,"
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after the cylindrical spacecraft that passed through the solar system
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in Arthur C. Clarke's classic science fiction story in 1973.
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But this wasn't quite right either,
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so in honor of it being discovered by a telescope in Hawaii,
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we consulted two experts on Hawaiian culture --
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a Hawaiian navigator and a linguist --
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to propose a name.
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And they suggested "'Oumuamua,"
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which means scout or messenger from the distant past reaching out to us.
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Now this discovery was important for many reasons,
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but to me the most significant is for what 'Oumuamua can tell us
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about the past of our solar system.
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The process of the birth of a new solar system and the growth of planets
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can be a violent and messy business.
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Leftover icy and rocky debris gets ejected from the new solar system
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as the giant planets migrate through the dusty disk
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out of which they're formed.
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Now have you ever felt an emotional chill,
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something that's so exciting that a shiver runs up and down your spine?
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Or something that's very emotionally moving?
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Well this was it for me.
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This was my wow moment.
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We actually had a piece of material from another solar system
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coming close enough for us to observe.
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So what would you like to know about 'Oumuamua,
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the very first visitor from another star system?
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Well, I could think of a million things,
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but there's what you want and what you can have,
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and 'Oumuamua was moving away and fading very rapidly.
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In the span of about a week,
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it had dropped in brightness by a factor of [10].
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So this is about all the time we were going to have
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to study it easily.
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So we had to distill the process of getting telescope time --
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normally a very competitive, peer-reviewed proposal process
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that can take up to months --
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down to less than a few days.
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So began a "polite" competition for resources.
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OK, let me not mince words. It was a fierce battle.
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We dropped everything,
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working around the clock,
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trying to craft perfectly crafted proposal words
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to send to the observatory directors.
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Well, good news. We got the time.
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Now, from a perfectly selfish point of view,
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the first thing we might like to know is how massive 'Oumuamua is.
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Because after all, it passed very close to the Earth,
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and we didn't know about it until afterwards.
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How bad would this have been had it not missed the Earth?
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Well, the impact energy
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depends on the square of the velocity times its mass,
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and the mass depends on how big it is and what it's made of.
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So how big is 'Oumuamua, and what's its shape?
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Well, we can get this from its brightness.
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Now, if you don't believe me, think of comparing the brightness
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of a firefly in your backyard
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to the navigation lights on a distant airplane.
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You know the airplane is much brighter --
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it just appears faint because it's so far away.
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We're also going to need to know
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how reflective the surface of 'Oumuamua is,
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and we don't have any clue,
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but it's reasonable to assume it's very similar to small asteroids
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and comets in our solar system,
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or in technical terms,
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something between the reflectivity of charcoal and wet sand.
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Nowadays, most of the big telescopes are used in what's called a service mode,
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meaning we have to carefully develop all the instructions
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and send them to the telescope operator,
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and then anxiously wait for the data to come back,
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praying to the weather gods.
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Now I bet most of you don't have careers
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that critically depend on whether or not it's cloudy last night.
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Well, we weren't going to get any second chances here.
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Because the weather was great, 'Oumuamua decided not to be.
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Its brightness wasn't constant.
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Now here we see 'Oumuamua racing between the stars.
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It's centered in the middle.
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The stars are trailed out because the telescope is following its motion.
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It started faint and then it got brighter, fainter, brighter, and fainter again,
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as sunlight is reflected off of four sides of an oblong object.
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The extreme brightness change
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led us to an unbelievable conclusion about its shape.
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As shown in this artist's impression,
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'Oumuamua is apparently very long and narrow,
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with an axis ratio of about 10 to one.
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Assuming it's dark, this means it's about half a mile long.
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Nothing else in our solar system looks like this.
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We only have a handful of objects that even have an axis ratio
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bigger than five to one.
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So we don't know how this forms,
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but it may be part of its birth process in its home solar system.
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'Oumuamua was varying in brightness every 7.34 hours,
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or so we thought.
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As more data started to come in from other teams,
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they were reporting different numbers.
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Why is it the more we learn about something,
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the harder it gets to interpret?
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Well, it turns out that 'Oumuamua is not rotating in a simple way.
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It's wobbling like a top.
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So while it is rotating around its short axis,
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it's also rolling around the long axis
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and nodding up and down.
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This very energetic, excited motion
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is almost certainly the result of it being violently tossed
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out of its home solar system.
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Now how we interpret the shape from its brightness
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depends very critically on how it's spinning,
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so now we have to rethink what it may look like,
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and as shown in this beautiful painting by space artist Bill Hartmann,
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we think that 'Oumuamua may be more of a flattened oval.
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So let's get back to the energetics.
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What is it made of?
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Well, ideally we would love to have a piece of 'Oumuamua
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into the laboratory, so we could study it in detail.
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But since even private industry can't manage to launch
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a spacecraft within a week
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to something like this,
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astronomers have to rely on remote observations.
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So astronomers will look at how the light interacts with the surface.
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Some colors may get absorbed, giving it a chemical fingerprint,
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whereas other colors may not.
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On the other hand, some substances may just reflect more blue
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or red light efficiently.
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In the case of 'Oumuamua, it reflected more red light,
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making it look very much like the organic rich surface of the comet recently visited
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by the Rosetta spacecraft.
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But not everything that looks reddish has the same composition.
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In fact, minerals that have tiny little bits of iron in the surface
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can also look red,
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as does the dark side of Saturn's moon Iapetus,
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shown in these images from the Cassini spacecraft.
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Nickel-iron meteorites, in other words, metal,
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can also look red.
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So while we don't know what's on the surface,
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we know even less about what's on the inside.
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However, we do know that it must at least be strong enough
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to not fly apart as it rotates,
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so it probably has a density similar to that of rocky asteroids;
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perhaps even denser, like metal.
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Well, at the very least, I want to show you
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one of the beautiful color images that we got
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from one of the ground-based telescopes.
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All right, I admit, it's not all that spectacular.
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(Laughter)
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We just don't have the resolution.
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Even Hubble Space Telescope
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doesn't present a much better view.
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But the importance of the Hubble data was not because of the images,
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but because it extended our observations out
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to two and a half months from the discovery,
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meaning we get more positions along the orbit,
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which will hopefully let us figure out where 'Oumuamua came from.
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So what exactly is 'Oumuamua?
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We firmly believe it's likely to be a leftover archaeological remnant
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from the process of the birth of another planetary system,
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some celestial driftwood.
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Some scientists think that maybe 'Oumuamua formed
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very close to a star that was much denser than our own,
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and the star's tidal forces shredded planetary material
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early in the solar system's history.
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Still others suggest that maybe this is something that formed
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during the death throes of a star,
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perhaps during a supernova explosion,
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as planetary material got shredded.
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Whatever it is, we believe it's a natural object,
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but we can't actually prove that it's not something artificial.
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The color, the strange shape, the tumbling motion
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could all have other explanations.
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Now while we don't believe this is alien technology,
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why not do the obvious experiment and search for a radio signal?
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That's exactly what the Breakthrough Listen project did,
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but so far, 'Oumuamua has remained completely quiet.
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Now could we send a spacecraft to 'Oumuamua
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and answer this question once and for all?
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Yes, we do actually have the technology,
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but it would be a long and expensive voyage,
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and we would get there so far from the Sun
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that the final approach trajectory would be very difficult.
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So I think 'Oumuamua probably has many more things to teach us,
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and in fact there might be more surprises in store
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as scientists such as myself continue to work with the data.
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More importantly, I think this visitor from afar
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has really brought home the point that our solar system isn't isolated.
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We're part of a much larger environment,
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and in fact, we may even be surrounded by interstellar visitors
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and not even know it.
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This unexpected gift
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has perhaps raised more questions than its provided answers,
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but we were the first to say hello to a visitor from another solar system.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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Jedidah Isler: Thanks, Karen.
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I of course enjoyed that talk very much. Thank you.
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As I recall, we found it pretty late in its journey towards us.
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Will future technologies like the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope
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help us detect these things sooner?
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Karen Meech: Yeah. We're hoping that we'll start to see a lot of these things,
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and ideally, you'd love to find one as it's approaching the Sun,
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because you want to have time to do all the science,
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or even more ideal,
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you'd get a spacecraft ready to go,
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parked somewhere in the L4 or L5 position,
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somewhere near Earth,
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so that when something comes by, you can chase it.
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JI: Awesome, thanks so much. Let's thank Karen again.
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(Applause)
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