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

7,318,132 views

2018-07-19 ・ TED


New videos

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

7,318,132 views ・ 2018-07-19

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:13
NASA's always on the lookout for possible asteroid collision hazards,
0
13142
5454
00:18
so the Pan-STARRS telescope is scanning the sky every night.
1
18620
4080
00:23
Each morning, candidate objects are examined by Pan-STARRS staff
2
23231
4120
00:27
and usually discovered to be no big deal.
3
27375
3227
00:30
But on October 19, 2017,
4
30626
2739
00:33
Pan-STARRS spotted an object moving rapidly between the stars,
5
33389
4652
00:38
and this time the usual follow-up measurements of position and speed
6
38065
4318
00:42
showed something completely different.
7
42407
2815
00:45
By October 22nd, we had enough data
8
45246
2505
00:47
to realize that this object wasn't from our solar system.
9
47775
4170
00:51
Holy cow.
10
51969
1341
00:53
That's when I got the phone call,
11
53334
1747
00:55
the phone call that all solar system astronomers are waiting for.
12
55105
4006
00:59
Let me tell you how exciting this was.
13
59135
2111
01:01
(Laughter)
14
61270
1007
01:02
NASA's been expecting to see an interstellar comet
15
62301
3121
01:05
pass through the solar system since the 1970s,
16
65446
3340
01:08
but until now, we'd never seen anything.
17
68810
2858
01:11
Our own solar system is huge,
18
71692
2626
01:14
so even getting a package from the nearest star system
19
74342
3309
01:17
4.4 light years away
20
77675
2103
01:19
would take over 50,000 years.
21
79802
2582
01:22
So this is a really big deal.
22
82408
2045
01:24
The interstellar visitor entered our solar system
23
84945
2502
01:27
from above the plane of the planets,
24
87471
1850
01:29
coming from the direction of the constellation Lyra,
25
89345
2833
01:32
and it passed closest to the Sun on September 9th,
26
92202
3436
01:35
passing inside the orbit of Mercury.
27
95662
2405
01:38
Now this isn't a particularly close approach or unusual distance.
28
98709
4029
01:42
It's just much easier to see objects close by.
29
102762
3709
01:47
On October 14th,
30
107124
1676
01:48
before we discovered it, it made its closest approach to the Earth,
31
108824
4102
01:52
within about 15 million miles.
32
112950
2690
01:55
This is really close by astronomical standards.
33
115664
2757
01:59
Now rather than call this by its unwieldy catalog name,
34
119341
4476
02:03
we briefly called it "Rama,"
35
123841
2643
02:06
after the cylindrical spacecraft that passed through the solar system
36
126508
3508
02:10
in Arthur C. Clarke's classic science fiction story in 1973.
37
130040
5214
02:15
But this wasn't quite right either,
38
135865
2077
02:17
so in honor of it being discovered by a telescope in Hawaii,
39
137966
3233
02:21
we consulted two experts on Hawaiian culture --
40
141223
3397
02:24
a Hawaiian navigator and a linguist --
41
144644
2453
02:27
to propose a name.
42
147121
1742
02:28
And they suggested "'Oumuamua,"
43
148887
2984
02:31
which means scout or messenger from the distant past reaching out to us.
44
151895
5055
02:37
Now this discovery was important for many reasons,
45
157972
3366
02:41
but to me the most significant is for what 'Oumuamua can tell us
46
161362
3836
02:45
about the past of our solar system.
47
165222
2417
02:48
The process of the birth of a new solar system and the growth of planets
48
168369
4041
02:52
can be a violent and messy business.
49
172434
3082
02:55
Leftover icy and rocky debris gets ejected from the new solar system
50
175540
4223
02:59
as the giant planets migrate through the dusty disk
51
179787
3349
03:03
out of which they're formed.
52
183160
1928
03:06
Now have you ever felt an emotional chill,
53
186175
3980
03:10
something that's so exciting that a shiver runs up and down your spine?
54
190179
4801
03:16
Or something that's very emotionally moving?
55
196115
2936
03:19
Well this was it for me.
56
199678
1747
03:21
This was my wow moment.
57
201449
1825
03:23
We actually had a piece of material from another solar system
58
203298
3888
03:27
coming close enough for us to observe.
59
207210
3659
03:31
So what would you like to know about 'Oumuamua,
60
211793
2858
03:34
the very first visitor from another star system?
61
214675
3031
03:38
Well, I could think of a million things,
62
218454
2788
03:41
but there's what you want and what you can have,
63
221266
3580
03:44
and 'Oumuamua was moving away and fading very rapidly.
64
224870
4334
03:49
In the span of about a week,
65
229228
2201
03:51
it had dropped in brightness by a factor of [10].
66
231453
2671
03:54
So this is about all the time we were going to have
67
234852
2416
03:57
to study it easily.
68
237292
1887
03:59
So we had to distill the process of getting telescope time --
69
239690
4922
04:04
normally a very competitive, peer-reviewed proposal process
70
244636
3540
04:08
that can take up to months --
71
248200
1848
04:10
down to less than a few days.
72
250072
2699
04:12
So began a "polite" competition for resources.
73
252795
3745
04:17
OK, let me not mince words. It was a fierce battle.
74
257408
2794
04:20
We dropped everything,
75
260226
1768
04:22
working around the clock,
76
262018
1446
04:23
trying to craft perfectly crafted proposal words
77
263488
3881
04:27
to send to the observatory directors.
78
267393
2245
04:30
Well, good news. We got the time.
79
270527
2848
04:34
Now, from a perfectly selfish point of view,
80
274178
3563
04:37
the first thing we might like to know is how massive 'Oumuamua is.
81
277765
4366
04:42
Because after all, it passed very close to the Earth,
82
282155
2840
04:45
and we didn't know about it until afterwards.
83
285019
3015
04:48
How bad would this have been had it not missed the Earth?
84
288757
4301
04:53
Well, the impact energy
85
293950
1802
04:55
depends on the square of the velocity times its mass,
86
295776
3609
04:59
and the mass depends on how big it is and what it's made of.
87
299409
3596
05:03
So how big is 'Oumuamua, and what's its shape?
88
303647
3421
05:07
Well, we can get this from its brightness.
89
307765
2320
05:10
Now, if you don't believe me, think of comparing the brightness
90
310109
2967
05:13
of a firefly in your backyard
91
313100
1382
05:14
to the navigation lights on a distant airplane.
92
314506
4420
05:18
You know the airplane is much brighter --
93
318950
1972
05:20
it just appears faint because it's so far away.
94
320946
2700
05:24
We're also going to need to know
95
324775
1834
05:26
how reflective the surface of 'Oumuamua is,
96
326633
3150
05:29
and we don't have any clue,
97
329807
2110
05:31
but it's reasonable to assume it's very similar to small asteroids
98
331941
3860
05:35
and comets in our solar system,
99
335825
1982
05:37
or in technical terms,
100
337831
1350
05:39
something between the reflectivity of charcoal and wet sand.
101
339205
4213
05:44
Nowadays, most of the big telescopes are used in what's called a service mode,
102
344381
5715
05:50
meaning we have to carefully develop all the instructions
103
350120
3856
05:54
and send them to the telescope operator,
104
354000
2549
05:56
and then anxiously wait for the data to come back,
105
356573
2929
05:59
praying to the weather gods.
106
359526
2223
06:01
Now I bet most of you don't have careers
107
361773
2301
06:04
that critically depend on whether or not it's cloudy last night.
108
364098
4811
06:08
Well, we weren't going to get any second chances here.
109
368933
3167
06:12
Because the weather was great, 'Oumuamua decided not to be.
110
372124
4108
06:16
Its brightness wasn't constant.
111
376256
2000
06:18
Now here we see 'Oumuamua racing between the stars.
112
378732
3215
06:21
It's centered in the middle.
113
381971
1579
06:23
The stars are trailed out because the telescope is following its motion.
114
383574
3920
06:28
It started faint and then it got brighter, fainter, brighter, and fainter again,
115
388145
5452
06:33
as sunlight is reflected off of four sides of an oblong object.
116
393621
4825
06:39
The extreme brightness change
117
399302
2430
06:41
led us to an unbelievable conclusion about its shape.
118
401756
4305
06:46
As shown in this artist's impression,
119
406085
1993
06:48
'Oumuamua is apparently very long and narrow,
120
408102
3531
06:51
with an axis ratio of about 10 to one.
121
411657
3103
06:55
Assuming it's dark, this means it's about half a mile long.
122
415479
3913
06:59
Nothing else in our solar system looks like this.
123
419987
3548
07:03
We only have a handful of objects that even have an axis ratio
124
423559
3438
07:07
bigger than five to one.
125
427021
1714
07:09
So we don't know how this forms,
126
429286
1979
07:11
but it may be part of its birth process in its home solar system.
127
431289
5198
07:17
'Oumuamua was varying in brightness every 7.34 hours,
128
437549
5469
07:23
or so we thought.
129
443042
1746
07:24
As more data started to come in from other teams,
130
444812
2342
07:27
they were reporting different numbers.
131
447178
2458
07:29
Why is it the more we learn about something,
132
449660
1926
07:31
the harder it gets to interpret?
133
451606
1940
07:34
Well, it turns out that 'Oumuamua is not rotating in a simple way.
134
454596
3389
07:38
It's wobbling like a top.
135
458009
2059
07:40
So while it is rotating around its short axis,
136
460092
3086
07:43
it's also rolling around the long axis
137
463202
2850
07:46
and nodding up and down.
138
466076
2070
07:48
This very energetic, excited motion
139
468887
2826
07:51
is almost certainly the result of it being violently tossed
140
471737
3460
07:55
out of its home solar system.
141
475221
1922
07:58
Now how we interpret the shape from its brightness
142
478363
2791
08:01
depends very critically on how it's spinning,
143
481178
2872
08:04
so now we have to rethink what it may look like,
144
484074
2970
08:07
and as shown in this beautiful painting by space artist Bill Hartmann,
145
487068
3445
08:10
we think that 'Oumuamua may be more of a flattened oval.
146
490537
3959
08:15
So let's get back to the energetics.
147
495822
1962
08:17
What is it made of?
148
497808
1911
08:19
Well, ideally we would love to have a piece of 'Oumuamua
149
499743
3224
08:22
into the laboratory, so we could study it in detail.
150
502991
3198
08:26
But since even private industry can't manage to launch
151
506213
3667
08:29
a spacecraft within a week
152
509904
1762
08:31
to something like this,
153
511690
1667
08:33
astronomers have to rely on remote observations.
154
513381
3161
08:36
So astronomers will look at how the light interacts with the surface.
155
516566
3945
08:40
Some colors may get absorbed, giving it a chemical fingerprint,
156
520535
4166
08:44
whereas other colors may not.
157
524725
2247
08:46
On the other hand, some substances may just reflect more blue
158
526996
4253
08:51
or red light efficiently.
159
531273
1818
08:53
In the case of 'Oumuamua, it reflected more red light,
160
533659
3723
08:57
making it look very much like the organic rich surface of the comet recently visited
161
537406
5023
09:02
by the Rosetta spacecraft.
162
542453
1786
09:04
But not everything that looks reddish has the same composition.
163
544887
4731
09:09
In fact, minerals that have tiny little bits of iron in the surface
164
549642
3476
09:13
can also look red,
165
553142
1937
09:15
as does the dark side of Saturn's moon Iapetus,
166
555103
2850
09:17
shown in these images from the Cassini spacecraft.
167
557977
2785
09:21
Nickel-iron meteorites, in other words, metal,
168
561432
2191
09:23
can also look red.
169
563647
1729
09:26
So while we don't know what's on the surface,
170
566032
2670
09:28
we know even less about what's on the inside.
171
568726
3146
09:32
However, we do know that it must at least be strong enough
172
572435
3088
09:35
to not fly apart as it rotates,
173
575547
2372
09:37
so it probably has a density similar to that of rocky asteroids;
174
577943
3960
09:41
perhaps even denser, like metal.
175
581927
2492
09:45
Well, at the very least, I want to show you
176
585305
2071
09:47
one of the beautiful color images that we got
177
587400
2142
09:49
from one of the ground-based telescopes.
178
589566
2140
09:52
All right, I admit, it's not all that spectacular.
179
592145
2999
09:55
(Laughter)
180
595168
1012
09:56
We just don't have the resolution.
181
596204
2959
09:59
Even Hubble Space Telescope
182
599187
1929
10:01
doesn't present a much better view.
183
601140
2049
10:04
But the importance of the Hubble data was not because of the images,
184
604220
3413
10:07
but because it extended our observations out
185
607657
2492
10:10
to two and a half months from the discovery,
186
610173
2683
10:12
meaning we get more positions along the orbit,
187
612880
2704
10:15
which will hopefully let us figure out where 'Oumuamua came from.
188
615608
4476
10:21
So what exactly is 'Oumuamua?
189
621667
2753
10:25
We firmly believe it's likely to be a leftover archaeological remnant
190
625150
5523
10:30
from the process of the birth of another planetary system,
191
630697
3588
10:34
some celestial driftwood.
192
634309
1848
10:36
Some scientists think that maybe 'Oumuamua formed
193
636593
3383
10:40
very close to a star that was much denser than our own,
194
640000
3595
10:43
and the star's tidal forces shredded planetary material
195
643619
3413
10:47
early in the solar system's history.
196
647056
1850
10:49
Still others suggest that maybe this is something that formed
197
649565
3961
10:53
during the death throes of a star,
198
653550
2166
10:55
perhaps during a supernova explosion,
199
655740
2792
10:58
as planetary material got shredded.
200
658556
2612
11:02
Whatever it is, we believe it's a natural object,
201
662345
3508
11:05
but we can't actually prove that it's not something artificial.
202
665877
4261
11:10
The color, the strange shape, the tumbling motion
203
670710
3357
11:14
could all have other explanations.
204
674091
2111
11:16
Now while we don't believe this is alien technology,
205
676825
3620
11:20
why not do the obvious experiment and search for a radio signal?
206
680469
4642
11:25
That's exactly what the Breakthrough Listen project did,
207
685640
2940
11:28
but so far, 'Oumuamua has remained completely quiet.
208
688604
3702
11:33
Now could we send a spacecraft to 'Oumuamua
209
693091
2779
11:35
and answer this question once and for all?
210
695894
2344
11:38
Yes, we do actually have the technology,
211
698262
2251
11:40
but it would be a long and expensive voyage,
212
700537
2389
11:42
and we would get there so far from the Sun
213
702950
2278
11:45
that the final approach trajectory would be very difficult.
214
705252
3293
11:49
So I think 'Oumuamua probably has many more things to teach us,
215
709790
5071
11:54
and in fact there might be more surprises in store
216
714885
2413
11:57
as scientists such as myself continue to work with the data.
217
717322
4055
12:02
More importantly, I think this visitor from afar
218
722138
3531
12:05
has really brought home the point that our solar system isn't isolated.
219
725693
4762
12:10
We're part of a much larger environment,
220
730852
2414
12:13
and in fact, we may even be surrounded by interstellar visitors
221
733290
4864
12:18
and not even know it.
222
738178
2033
12:20
This unexpected gift
223
740235
2112
12:22
has perhaps raised more questions than its provided answers,
224
742371
4587
12:26
but we were the first to say hello to a visitor from another solar system.
225
746982
5325
12:32
Thank you.
226
752712
1182
12:33
(Applause)
227
753918
6984
12:42
Jedidah Isler: Thanks, Karen.
228
762946
1455
12:44
I of course enjoyed that talk very much. Thank you.
229
764425
2382
12:46
As I recall, we found it pretty late in its journey towards us.
230
766831
3553
12:50
Will future technologies like the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope
231
770408
3612
12:54
help us detect these things sooner?
232
774044
1713
12:56
Karen Meech: Yeah. We're hoping that we'll start to see a lot of these things,
233
776353
3745
13:00
and ideally, you'd love to find one as it's approaching the Sun,
234
780122
3819
13:03
because you want to have time to do all the science,
235
783965
3016
13:07
or even more ideal,
236
787005
1197
13:08
you'd get a spacecraft ready to go,
237
788226
2065
13:10
parked somewhere in the L4 or L5 position,
238
790315
3150
13:13
somewhere near Earth,
239
793489
1334
13:14
so that when something comes by, you can chase it.
240
794847
2991
13:17
JI: Awesome, thanks so much. Let's thank Karen again.
241
797862
2549
13:20
(Applause)
242
800435
2664
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7