By Irene Klotz
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla., April 29 (Reuters) - Astronomers have
found a first-of-its-kind tailless comet whose composition may
offer clues into long-standing questions about the solar
system's formation and evolution, according to research
published on Friday in the journal Science Advances.
The so-called "Manx" comet, named after a breed of cats
without tails, was made of rocky materials that are normally
found near Earth. Most comets are made of ice and other frozen
compounds and were formed in solar system's frigid far reaches.
Researchers believe the newly found comet was formed in the
same region as Earth, then booted to the solar system's backyard
like a gravitational slingshot as planets jostled for position.
Scientists involved in the discovery now seek to learn how
many more Manx comets exist, which could help to resolve debate
over exactly how and when the solar system settled into its
current configuration.
"Depending how many we find, we will know whether the giant
planets danced across the solar system when they were young, or
if they grew up quietly without moving much," paper co-author
Olivier Hainaut, an astronomer with the European Southern
Observatory in Germany, said in a statement.
The new comet, known as C/2014 S3, was discovered in 2014 by
the Panoramic Survey Telescope and Rapid Response System, or
Pan-STARRS. This network of telescopes scours the night-time
skies for fast-moving comets, asteroids and other celestial
bodies.
Typically comets coming in from the same region as the Manx
grow bright tails as they approach the sun, the result of ice
vaporizing off their bodies and gleaming in reflected sunlight.
But C/2014 S3 was dark and virtually tailless when it was
spotted about twice as far away from the sun as Earth.
Later analysis showed that instead of ices typically found
on comets, the Manx comet contained materials similar to the
rocky asteroids located in a belt between Mars and Jupiter.
And C/2014 S3 appeared pristine, an indication that it had
been in the solar system's deep freeze for a long time, said
University of Hawaii astronomer Karen Meech, the lead author.
The discovery of additional Manx comets could help
scientists to refine computer models used to simulate the solar
system's formation, Meech said.
(Reporting by Irene Klotz; editing by Letitia Stein and Diane
Craft)
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