| UFO has left scientists baffled |
| One World | |
| Wednesday, 03 February 2010 19:18 | |
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It was first spotted early last month so astronomers turned the Hubble telescope on it last week to get these close up images. The object — named P/2010 A2 — is of a type never before seen by stargazers and orbits in a satellite belt between Mars and Jupiter. Despite its tail they have ruled out it being a comet, as there is no gas in its trail. The 140-metre nucleus is also offset from the centre of the tail and its structure is very unusual. The most likely theory is that it is debris from a collision between two asteroids which were likely to have smashed together at a speed of 15,000 kilometres an hour, five times the speed of a rifle bullet. The resulting collision would have released more energy than a nuclear bomb. It is believed that pressure from sunlight then spread the debris out into a trail. Dr Robert J Nemiroff, astrophysicist at Michigan Technological University and the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, said: "Future study of P/2010 A2 may better indicate the nature of the original collision and may help humanity better understand the early years of our Solar System, when many similar collisions occurred." He added: "What is this strange object? First discovered on ground based LINEAR images on January 6, the object appeared unusual enough to investigate further with the Hubble Space Telescope last week. |
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