Français
  • When Worlds Collide (in Sci-Fi and Science)


    Added on Wednesday 16 June 2010 11:34:08
    by SpaceRip
    34093 Views
    4.9 / 5
    12345
    348 rates
    Send this video to your friends
    Get embed code of video

    From Spitzer Space Telescope's acclaimed Hidden Universe series, NASA/JPL/Caltech.

    Nearly 60 years ago, audiences thrilled to the destruction of the Earth in George Pal's classic film, "When Worlds Collide." The idea of a planetary smash-up is a staple of science fiction, but can it really happen?

    Astronomers using NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope think they've actually seen the aftermath of such a collision around another star.

    The story unfolded as Dr. Casey Lisse and his team studied disks around young stars. Once planets have formed astronomers think there are a lot of left-over asteroids in the system. They occasionally slam together and produce dusty debris.

    Spitzer's Infrared Spectrograph was designed to detect the faint glow from this material. By spreading the light out into its component colors, astronomers can look for the spectral fingerprints of different minerals.

    Our dusty star of interest is a faint speck known as HD 172555. It's about 100 light years away and 12 million years old which, compared to our 4.5 billion year old Sun, is like a baby born a few days ago.

    Studying its spectrum, Dr. Lisse and his colleagues realized they had found something very peculiar that they had not seen around other stars. Aside from the usual indicators of rocky rubble, they found features corresponding to tektite, obsidian, and silicon monoxide gas.

    What's strange is that tektite and obsidian are formed from molten materials. Tektites are hardened chunks of lava found around meteor impacts on Earth, and obsidian is volcanic glass. Vaporized rocks can form silicon monoxide gas.

    You don't get this kind of material by just smashing a couple of asteroids together. The evidence suggests something much more... cataclysmic. Imagine what would happen if our moon slammed, at high velocity, into a Mercury-sized planet. The resulting impact would eject a massive amount of molten material into space. As it cooled it would likely form tektite, obsidian, and silicon monoxide gas, explaining the features seen in the HD 172555 spectrum.

    It's amazing to think Spitzer may have caught the aftermath of such an incredible collision. But, it's not the first time astronomers have speculated about world-shattering events. In fact, similar things may have happened right here in our own back yard.

    Mercury is a strangely dense planet compared to the other worlds in the solar system. Now if it formed from the same stuff as Venus and Earth, why would it be any different? A world-shattering impact could be the answer. When planets form the lighter materials rise and denser ones sink to the core. Remove the outer, lighter layers and you're left with a denser planet, once what's left cools off.

    Looking to our neighbor Mars we see a massive impact scar in its Southern hemisphere. This area, known as the Hellas Basin, must have formed from an asteroid impact long ago. The resulting plume of molten material would have been blasted into space, some of it eventually reaching the ancient Earth.

    Even closer to home, most astronomers believe that our own moon was formed in a similar cataclysm. The theory is that a Mars-sized body grazed the still- forming Earth, generating a massive amount of molten debris. The orbiting rubble would clump together over time, forming the moon.

    The tektite and obsidian debris from such massive impacts would not last long around our sun, or others. Solar winds and gravitational interactions tend to sweep away the dust over time, and in a few tens of thousands of years the evidence would be erased.

    In the long history of our solar system, that's hardly the blink of any eye. The evidence may be long gone here, but seeing what may happen when worlds collide around a nearby star shows us it's not just science fiction after all.



    facebook
  • Write your comment here...
  • MacDroidify

    @hellkillah234 No
    Saturday 04 February 2012 18:36:30
  • bencinurts

    Densth
    Saturday 15 October 2011 21:09:05
  • bencinurts

    Thspeculated
    Saturday 15 October 2011 21:08:37
  • bencinurts

    That guysth cut!
    Saturday 15 October 2011 21:07:05
  • hellkillah234

    soo...let me dumb it down.. big planet hitting another planet creates sun...
    Saturday 15 October 2011 15:15:39
  • rugmanbob

    the world is comming to an end and they are worried about THE COST of building another space ship  lol
    Tuesday 04 October 2011 15:06:19
  • stevarass

    goodbye and thank you for the fish....
    Thursday 22 September 2011 18:36:21
  • revrunnertech2772

    i got interested in science and space after my mom showed me a picture of the 9 (now 8) planets since then, i know 1000% more science than anyone else
    Sunday 17 July 2011 14:24:17
  • NCRRanger108

    MY HAND IS A DOLPHIN !!!!!!
    Wednesday 06 July 2011 16:58:41
  • granddad2002

    Space is fascinating. I'm 47 and everything I knew as a child has been re-written. Between the probes we sent across the solar system, to vast technical improvements of telescopes... even our media and the public consciousness isn't the same as it was 50 years ago. I hope that people who know how to watch the skies and launch probes can get the NEOs tagged.... a rock the size of Witchita, Ks hitting the Earth at 30,000 kph would be a bad day for us.
    Monday 04 July 2011 11:44:40
  • Scytherene122190

    @WildWaffleWriter Now I like to learn about our worldly problems in dealing with this global governance that is threatening the very fabric of our own human nature, it is even killing our connection with the Earth. I also enjoy learning more about the universe, the beholder of all things. I still have much to learn, I am just starting really, but I keep myself going knowing that there are still people out there who haven't lost touch with reality.
    Saturday 05 March 2011 19:36:10
  • Scytherene122190

    @WildWaffleWriter Funny thing is a huge portion of my latter life was devoted to getting fucked up; being outright lazy, drinking, smoking, snorting etc... now the past year and a half I've chosen to ascend myself in knowledge, personality and compassion. I understand I was confused, and it seemed there weren't many choices left for me anymore.. I dwarfed myself. I still smoke marijuana nowadays, but that's very minor compared to many other people's severe problems.
    Saturday 05 March 2011 19:28:11
  • elvisdustin

    if you hate the retarted adds like this
    Saturday 26 February 2011 14:53:52
  • samuelayele

    @WildWaffleWriter the same here
    Sunday 13 February 2011 15:47:20
  • lgarvey

    Most adults stay up talking with friends and having parties. I like to get naked and watch spacerip all night long
    Sunday 13 February 2011 14:28:37
  • patrickcorliss

    "In space, nobody can hear you scream" from Alien, the movie.
    Saturday 12 February 2011 23:05:52
  • MMaeidlilniAW

    @WildWaffleWriter I do the same but instead science it is usually politics for me.
    Saturday 12 February 2011 03:15:25
  • sucker4life09

    omfg! i want that dude as my friend! yes!
    Thursday 23 December 2010 17:05:44
  • KarbineKyle

    @WildWaffleWriter I don't throw stupid parties either. I think relaxing, and watching videos about science all night is actually way better! Besides, all people do now at parties is get f**ked up. I'm not perfect. I've gone to parties, but I just like socializing. I LOVE TO LEARN! It's funny, because the people I've been around with say I'm the smartest person in the group. Gee, I wonder why? =P 2 worlds colliding... Imagine the mass panic if it was Earth! The Universe is Beautiful, yet Chaotic!
    Wednesday 15 December 2010 03:20:40
  • MrHazZona

    That guy didn't blink xD
    Sunday 28 November 2010 05:40:34
  • isakilla1

    @WildWaffleWriter :D same
    Saturday 27 November 2010 19:33:46
  • FallofDarkness55

    @WildWaffleWriter yeah i'm not normal either. i value science and education a lot more than throwing stupid parties and getting my life all screwed up.
    Sunday 14 November 2010 08:05:12
  • funnyfootballs

    4:32 I was like "Dude Watch Out!" :)
    Tuesday 09 November 2010 14:11:46
  • Darkwintre

    Interesting I didn't know that about Mercury, my guess was Mars and whatever formed the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter.
    Friday 05 November 2010 12:17:24
  • davothebum2201

    whoa ! at 4:34 I thought that planet was gonna hit him ..
    Wednesday 27 October 2010 05:59:08
ADVERTISEMENT
Supplements
Social Network
Tag cloud