Scientific American - USA (2020-10)

(Antfer) #1

48 Scientific American, October 2020 Illustration by Matthew Twombly


SOURCE: SMALL-BODY DATABASE BROWSER, JET PROPULSION LABORATORY/NASA (

trajectory

)

He

lio

pau

se

Plane of
solar system

Current location
(October 2020)

March 2037

Sun

Earth

Venus Mercury

Mars
November 30

December 30
Planets positioned
according to date
of discovery

January 30, 2020
February 29

Sun

October 30

Saturn

Uranus

Neptune

Jupiter orbit

Incoming velocity
32.2 kilometers per
second (6.8 AU/year)

800–1,000 meters

‘Oumuamua
shown for
reference

2I/Borisov
Discovered:
August 30, 2019

September 30

Snow line

2I/Borisov


The second known interstellar interloper contrasts in many ways with the first.
It resembles an ordinary comet with a typical roundish shape and no unexpected
movement. Borisov matches astronomers’ predictions for a visitor from beyond
the solar system and most likely represents a leftover planetary building block ejected
from the outer, icy region of a nascent planetary system.

DISCOVERY
Found by amateur astronomer
Gennadiy Borisov in Ukraine
using his 0.65-meter
homemade telescope.

APPEARANCE
Its true shape is unknown,
but it is believed to resemble
a typical comet with a radius of
400 to 500 meters. It displays
a classic comet tail.

OUTGASSING
Like most comets, Borisov
releases gas as ice sublimates
off its surface, providing
an extra push.

ORIGIN
Because of its ice content,
Borisov is thought to have been
ejected from the cold outer edge
of a distant planetary system.

TRAJECTORY
Borisov was detected earlier
in its foray into our solar
system, coming from above
the plane of our system.
It has now crossed the plane
out beyond the orbit
of Mars and is still visible
to our telescopes.

© 2020 Scientific American
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