Two families of comets found around nearby star

Beta Pictoris is a young star located about 63 light-years from the Sun. It is only about 20 million years old and is surrounded by a huge disc of material - a very active young planetary system where gas and dust are produced by the evaporation of comets and the collisions of asteroids.

Flavien Kiefer (IAP/CNRS/UPMC), lead author of the new study sets the scene: "Beta Pictoris is a very exciting target! The detailed observations of its exocomets give us clues to help understand what processes occur in this kind of young planetary system."

For almost 30 years astronomers have seen subtle changes in the light from Beta Pictoris that were thought to be caused by the passage of comets in front of the star itself. Comets are small bodies of a few kilometres in size, but they are rich in ices, which evaporate when they approach their star, producing gigantic tails of gas and dust that can absorb some of the light passing through them.

The dim light from the exocomets is swamped by the light of the brilliant star so they cannot be imaged directly from Earth.

To study the Beta Pictoris exocomets, the team analysed more than 1000 observations obtained between 2003 and 2011 with the HARPS instrument on the ESO 3.6-metre telescope at the La Silla Observatory in Chile.

The researchers selected a sample of 493 different exocomets. Some exocomets were observed several times and for a few hours. Careful analysis provided measurements of the speed and the size of the gas clouds. Some of the orbital properties of each of these exocomets, such as the shape and the orientation of the orbit and the distance to the star, could also be deduced.

This analysis of several hundreds of exocomets in a single exo-planetary system is unique.

It revealed the presence of two distinct families of exocomets: one family of old exocomets whose orbits are controlled by a massive planet [1], and another family, probably arising from the recent breakdown of one or a few bigger objects. Different families of comets also exist in the Solar System.

The exocomets of the first family have a variety of orbits and show a rather weak activity with low production rates of gas and dust. This suggests that these comets have exhausted their supplies of ices during their multiple passages close to Beta Pictoris [2].

The exocomets of the second family are much more active and are also on nearly identical orbits [3]. This suggests that the members of the second family all arise from the same origin: probably the breakdown of a larger object whose fragments are on an orbit grazing the star Beta Pictoris.

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Two families of comets found around nearby star

Scientists determine a comet's smell: awful

By Jenn Gidman

Newser

In this picture taken on Aug. 3, 2014, by Rosettas OSIRIS narrow-angle camera, Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko is pictured.(AP Photo/ESA/Rosetta/MPS for OSIRIS Team)

Comets stink, and not just because they have the potential to cause cataclysmic devastation if they ever came hurtling through our atmosphere and made impact with Earth.

These "cosmic snowballs of frozen gases, rock, and dust roughly the size of a small town" (as described by NASA) literally stink to high heaven, according to scientists at Switzerland's University of Bern.

One comet does, anyway: Researchers analyzed the "perfume" of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko and said that its BO is apparently a combo of "rotten eggs, horse urine, formaldehyde, bitter almonds, alcohol, vinegar, and a hint of sweet ether," the AP reports.

"If you could smell the comet, you would probably wish that you hadn't," reads a blog post on the European Space Agency site. The scientists were able to surmise what the comet would smell like by examining the gas emitted by the "coma," the comet's head, Phys.org reports.

Luckily, instead of a squeamish human, a mass spectrometer aboard the space probe Rosetta was assigned the task of parsing out the perfumed molecules of 67P, including ammonia, methane, hydrogen sulfide, hydrogen cyanide, and "the pungent, suffocating (odor) of formaldehyde," notes the ESA post.

The probe caught up to the comet in August after chasing it nearly 4 billion miles; it will be sending its Philae robot lander onto the comet proper on Nov. 12, NASA reports.

And it appears the comet's odoriferous odyssey is just beginning: The lead scientist on the project says that as 67P gets closer to the sun, it will start stinking up the cosmos even more.

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Scientists determine a comet's smell: awful

ACT Comets duo score centuries to help Eastlake take victory in clash against Tuggeranong

Sam Thornton of Tuggeranong drives powerfully against Eastlakes.

ACT Comets duo Vele Dukoski and Michael Spaseski have hit form at the right time, each smashing centuries in club cricket two days before the start of the Futures League.

Dukoski hammered 118 and his Eastlake captain Spaseski scored 103 in their side's comfortable 100-run win against Tuggeranong at Kingston Oval on Saturday.

Batsmen reigned supreme across the capital in the Gallop Cup.

North Canberra Gungahlin entered the record books with the largest one-day score in the competition's history, posting an imposing total of 353 in its match with ANU.

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Scotland international George Munsey was the star with 130 from just 88 balls, while opening partner Brock Winkler was three short of a well-deserved ton, falling for 97 from 82 deliveries.

Meanwhile, Blake Dean scored 135 and older brother Jono Dean chipped in with 68 in Weston Creek Molonglo's total of 8-286 against Wests/UC at Stirling.

Dukoski and Spaseski will both back-up for the Comets in their opening four-day game of the summer when they host the Queensland second XI at Manuka Oval, starting Monday.

Eastlake lost two wickets to be 2-35 before Dukoski and Spaseski teamed up to take the game away from Tuggeranong.

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ACT Comets duo score centuries to help Eastlake take victory in clash against Tuggeranong

X Class Solar Flare, Exo-comets, Eclipse | S0 News October 23, 2014 – Video


X Class Solar Flare, Exo-comets, Eclipse | S0 News October 23, 2014
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Comets Ride Kenins and Eriksson to Victory over the Rampage

October 24, 2014 - American Hockey League (AHL) Utica Comets Ronalds Kenins two-goal night, and Joacim Eriksson's 38 save performance powered the Utica Comets to a 5-2 victory over the San Antonio Rampage in front of a sold out crowd at the Utica Memorial Auditorium on Friday Night

It didn't take long for the Comets to start the night's barrage of goals. Just 20 seconds after Jensen was sent to the box for hooking, Dustin Jeffrey broke out of the neutral zone to the left of San Antonio's goaltender Dan Ellis with a 2-on-1 with Brandon DeFazio. DeFazio added his second short-handed goal in as many gamess after he one-timed the pass from Jeffrey past Ellis just 4:21 into the game.

After successfully killing off Jensen's holding penalty, the Comets continued to lay on the pressure and found the back of the net again at the 13:33 mark. Kenins was credited with his first American Hockey League goal after he deflected a Peter Andersson slap shot up and over Ellis and into the back of the net.

Once the Comets killed off a string of four power play opportunities for the Rampage in the second period, they took their turn on the power play. Kenins was able to find the back of net again at the 16:36 mark of the second, for his second goal of the night. O'Reilly wristed a shot on goal, Kenins got his stick on the shot which deflected the puck up. The puck bounced off of a Rampage defenders' helmet, and slowly trickled across the goal line. Bobby Sanguinetti picked up the secondary assist on the play.

San Antonio finally got the puck past a Comets goaltender for the first time this year when Logan Shaw took a quick slapshot from the point. The puck deflected its way past the glove side of Comets goaltender Joacim Eriksson. It was the first goal scored by the opposition at The AUD in 182:34 minutes of gameplay, which takes the scoreless streak all the way back to April 18th when they faced the Toronto Marlies in their second to last game of the season.

The game ended with a flurry of goals which started when Comets' defender Travis Ehrhardt took a holding penalty at the 14:37 mark of the third period. Steven Kampfer of San Antonio was able to set up in the attacking zone and wristed home a shot past Eriksson. Up until that goal, the Comets had killed 24 consecutive penalties to start the season.

Two empty net goals in the final minute and a half of the game sealed things up for the Comets. Nicklas Jensen pushed the Comets lead to 4-2 with an empty-net goal from the red line. It looked like a communication breakdown between the Rampage bench and Dan Ellis led to Ellis skating to the bench for the extra attacker as Jensen broke the puck of the Comets zone. Looking at the empty net, Jensen fired the puck in the net from center ice. Ehrhardt and O'Reilly picked up assists on the goals.

Now down two goals, the Rampage tried the empty net approach again. Dustin Jeffrey picked up his third goal of the year with an empty-net goal with just 12 seconds to play. DeFazio and Archibald recorded the assists.

Eriksson was named first star of the game after he faced a total of 40 shots and turned away 38 for the night. This was Eriksson's first win of the season.

The Comets are back at it again tomorrow night at 7 p.m. at The AUD as they face the Toronto Marlies for the third time this season. In their last two meetings, the Comets walked away with three of four points. All fans in attendance will receive a special Comets flag.

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Comets Ride Kenins and Eriksson to Victory over the Rampage

10/10 2014 Clayton Comets 10 @ Garner Trojans 63 Varsity Football game – Video


10/10 2014 Clayton Comets 10 @ Garner Trojans 63 Varsity Football game
The Shrine Bowl Selection process did no favors to the Clayton Comets. Garner star Nyheim Hines, left off the 44-man roster, played Friday night like a man w...

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10/10 2014 Clayton Comets 10 @ Garner Trojans 63 Varsity Football game - Video

Comets advance to finals behind potent offense

WRIGHT TWP. At 4-f0ot-11 and a half (dont forget the half), Daniella Callaghan admits most opponents arent particularly intimidated by her when she steps onto the field.

They dont expect me to do anything, the senior forward said. And then I just wiggle around them.

And scores goals.

Callaghan struck twice to help lead Crestwood into the District II Class AA Field Hockey Tournament final after topping Holy Redeemer 5-1 on Thursday afternoon.

The Comets will face Lake-Lehman, 1-0 winners over Wyoming Seminary, the defending state champions, on Oct. 28 as they look to defend their district title.

Crestwoods potent offense took a while to get going as the Redeemer defense, led by Alexis Lewis, blocked off passing lanes and jammed up passing opportunities.

It was the kind of Herculean effort that would be tough to last a full 60 minutes. It didnt. Elizabeth Dessoye broke through on a cross-body shot, assisted by Hannah Ackers, to the left-side of the box to give Crestwood an early 1-0 lead.

Callaghan scored the Comets second goal of the game off a corner at 5:52.

It seems like weve had a hard time defending corners all year long, especially here at the very end, Holy Redeemer head coach Juliann DeFalco said. In the Lehman game and here. It was a big deal. I thought we did a lot of nice things, however I think we had a hard time stopping them in the circle.

Trailing 2-0 heading into the second half, Redeemers Jen Ringsdorf looked to cut into the lead. On a breakaway down the left-side of the field, Ringsdorf had her eyes on a play at the box. But the speedy Crestwood defenders chased her down to add just enough pressure to disrupt her shot on goal.

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ACT Comets captain and Adelaide Strikers batsman Jono Dean dropped for Futures League match with Queensland

ACT Comets captain Jono Dean has been dropped for Monday's game against Queensland Photo: Matt Bedford

A disappointed ACT Comets captain Jono Dean admits his preparation for the Big Bash League has taken a blow with his shock omission.

The Adelaide Strikers opener has been sensationally dropped from a Comets side featuring just five players from the ACT grade competition for next Monday's opening Futures League game of the season against the Queensland second XI at Manuka Oval.

Former Ginninderra batsman David Dawson will skipper the Comets in his first game in nearly a decade after stints with Tasmania and NSW.

Matt Condon, Andrew Harriott, Daniel Magin, Nathan McAndrew and Mitch Phelps have also been included despite not playing in the ACT grade competition.

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Dean is the biggest casualty of the influx of players from country NSW as part of the agreement with Cricket ACT.

The 30-year-old burst on to the scene with a half-century for the PM's XI against the West Indies in January last year before earning a professional Twenty20 contract with the Strikers.

However, he has scored just 431 runs at an average of 28.73 for the Comets in the past two seasons in the Futures League to put his position in jeopardy.

"I'm disappointed, but the selectors made a decision so I can't argue with it," Dean said.

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ACT Comets captain and Adelaide Strikers batsman Jono Dean dropped for Futures League match with Queensland

Two Families Of Comets Found Around Nearby Beta Pictoris Star

October 23, 2014

Image Caption: This artists impression shows exocomets orbiting the star Beta Pictoris. Astronomers analyzing observations of nearly 500 individual comets made with the HARPS instrument at ESOs La Silla Observatory have discovered two families of exocomets around this nearby young star. The first consists of old exocomets that have made multiple passages near the star. The second family, shown in this illustration, consists of younger exocomets on the same orbit, which probably came from the recent breakup of one or more larger objects. Credit: ESO/L. Calada

Provided by Richard Hook, ESO

Biggest census ever of exocomets around Beta Pictoris

Beta Pictoris is a young star located about 63 light-years from the Sun. It is only about 20 million years old and is surrounded by a huge disc of material a very active young planetary system where gas and dust are produced by the evaporation of comets and the collisions of asteroids.

Flavien Kiefer (IAP/CNRS/UPMC), lead author of the new study sets the scene: Beta Pictoris is a very exciting target! The detailed observations of its exocomets give us clues to help understand what processes occur in this kind of young planetary system.

For almost 30 years astronomers have seen subtle changes in the light from Beta Pictoris that were thought to be caused by the passage of comets in front of the star itself. Comets are small bodies of a few kilometers in size, but they are rich in ices, which evaporate when they approach their star, producing gigantic tails of gas and dust that can absorb some of the light passing through them. The dim light from the exocomets is swamped by the light of the brilliant star so they cannot be imaged directly from Earth.

To study the Beta Pictoris exocomets, the team analyzed more than 1000 observations obtained between 2003 and 2011 with the HARPS instrument on the ESO 3.6-meter telescope at the La Silla Observatory in Chile.

[ Watch the Video: Artists Impression Of Exocomets Around Beta Pictoris ]

The researchers selected a sample of 493 different exocomets. Some exocomets were observed several times and for a few hours. Careful analysis provided measurements of the speed and the size of the gas clouds. Some of the orbital properties of each of these exocomets, such as the shape and the orientation of the orbit and the distance to the star, could also be deduced.

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Two Families Of Comets Found Around Nearby Beta Pictoris Star

In a first, astronomers map comets around another star

PARIS Astronomers using an ultra-sensitive telescope in the Chilean desert said Wednesday they had mapped hundreds of comets orbiting a star 63 light-years from Earth.

The feat marks the most complete census of so-called exocomets, or comets in other solar systems, they said.

Comets shed ice, gas and dust as they near a star like our sun, creating one or more tails.

Astrophysicists are keen on them for other reasons.

Comets are believed to be ancient remnants left from the building of our solar system some 4.6 billion years ago.

Previous work has found that other stars, too, have comets.

But it has been extremely difficult to get a more detailed picture.

Comets are tiny relative to the size of their star, and their tail is swamped by the starlight, which makes it hard to identify them and calculate their orbit.

Reporting in the journal Nature, a French-led team pored over nearly 1,000 observations of a youthful star, Beta Pictoris, that were made over a period of eight years.

The images were taken with a highly sensitive instrument, HARPS, at the European Southern Observatorys La Silla facility in Chiles bone-dry Atacama desert.

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In a first, astronomers map comets around another star

Fans Welcome Back Comets at Sold Out Home Opener

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Thousands welcomed back the Utica Comets at their sold out home opener Wednesday. It's the team's second year and they're already improving from year one. Alana LaFlore reports how venue improvements and a new roster means the Comets' future looks bright.

UTICA, N.Y. -- With five games now under their belt, the Comets are back. Last year's season began with a 10 game losing streak, but towards the end they turned it around.

"If we went three and seven we would have actually made the playoffs," said Michael Melioris, a Comets fan. "We're on a roll - we had a shut out this year."

After Wednesday's game against the Adirondack Flames, the Comets already have three wins. This year's roster has five first round draft picks and the new blood has been a big boost.

"You can see it right away, I mean there's more chemistry on the ice, a lot of the guys played together last year so you don't have to worry about that familiarity anymore," said Utica Comet communications director Mark Caswell, Jr.

Not only is the roster beefed up - the Aud has made improvements of its own. It added a members bar and suite over looking the ice and did other projects like paint jobs, installing new lighting, putting televisions to broadcast games in the concourse and infrastructure repairs. Improvements many hope trickle into the rest of the city.

"You have Tony's that opened up right in the back last year, it just catches on - the appearance of the city is shaping right up," said Melioris. "This is a Renaissance city, it's coming back - it's going to be a high tech city."

With fan support - the home opener was the Comets 18th sold out game - and a stronger start - the team hopes things will continue picking up.

Next month they'll play in the Toyota Frozen Dome Classic against the Syracuse Crunch - the first ever hockey game at the Carrier Dome.

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Fans Welcome Back Comets at Sold Out Home Opener

Comets and Markstrom Shutdown the Flames

October 22, 2014 - American Hockey League (AHL) Utica Comets The Utica Comets returned to the Utica Memorial Auditorium for the first home game of the 2014-15 season and blanked the Adirondack Flames with a final score of 3-0.

Jacob Markstrom was a big story heading into the game, and an even bigger one after the game finished. He stopped all 29 Adirondack shots, which led to his second shutout in three games with the Comets. Following tonight's game, he has played 172:33 minutes without letting a goal into the back of the net. The last goal scored on Markstrom was at the 7:27 mark of the first period of the Comets first game.

The Comets went almost the whole first period without scoring a goal but that all changed when Hunter Shinkaruk took advantage of a screen in front of Joni Ortio's net. Just after defenseman Sena Acolatse went to the box for a delay of game at 16:40 in the first, Shinkaruk snapped it in towards Ortio and scored his first goal of his professional career. Dustin Jeffrey and Travis Ehrhardt were credited with the assists.

After an uneventful second period, the Comets decided one was just not enough for the fans at The AUD. It didn't take long after the third period started for Nicklas Jensen to find himself wide open for a slot pass from Cal O'Reilly. Once Jensen had it on his stick, Ortio had little time to react as he buried on his glove side for his first goal of the year. Along with O'Reilly, Ryan Jones also notched an assist.

The goal that put the game away for the Comets was started as a giveaway by Adirondack at center ice as they tried to set up for a power play. Brandon DeFazio intercepted the pass and was left alone as he rushed in on the right side of Ortio to score an unassisted shorthanded goal on his short side.

The Comets power play continues to be a driving force and a main reason why they are keeping leads. They are now 18 for 18 on the penalty kill. The Comets power play went 1 for 7 on the night.

The Comets are back in action Friday night as they face the San Antonio Rampage at the Utica Memorial Auditorium at 7 p.m. EST. The Comets beat the Rampage 3-0 in San Antonio on October 17.All fans in attendance will receive a Comets magnetic schedule, courtesy of Assist2Sell.

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Comets and Markstrom Shutdown the Flames

Hundreds of Comets Seen Orbiting Distant Solar System

The exocomets swarming around Beta Pictoris mirror those seen in our own solar system, but for a few surprising differences.

This artist's rendition shows swarms of exocomets orbiting the young star Beta Pictoris

In 1986, while watching a star some 63 light-years away called Beta Pictoris, French astronomer Anne-Marie Lagrange and her colleagues noticed something deeply strange. They were watching because, two years earlier, other researchers observing the young, 23-million-year-old star had viewed edge-on the infrared glow of what seemed to be a giant spinning disk of dust and gas, similar to that from which our own solar system was born long ago. Beta Pictoris appeared to be in the latter stages of assembling its own planetary system, and astronomers essentially had a front-row seat. Studying the starlight shining through the disk Lagrange spied unexpected hints of motion coming and going over hours and days, almost as if some shadowy light-absorbing structures were every now and then swirling into view. For months Lagrange and her colleagues struggled to explain the observations; they considered stellar pulsations, drifting dust grains and other phenomena, but none closely matched the data. Grasping at straws, in 1987 they offered up one last, wild explanation, later proved to be true: They were seeing starlight shining through giant plumes of gas pouring off icy objects plunging through the disk toward the star. That is, they were seeing star-grazing cometsaka exocometsyears before the first discoveries of exoplanets. Lagrange would go on to devote her PhD work to Beta Pictoris under the tutelage of fellow French astronomer Alfred Vidal-Madjar of the Paris Institute of Astrophysics (IAP), and in 2008 helmed a team that discovered and imaged a giant planet, Beta Pictoris b, freshly formed around the star. Nearly 30 years after the discovery of Beta Pictoriss disk and comets, the system is one of the most-monitored objects in the sky. Today, Lagrange and a team of other French astronomers add one more facet to astronomers understanding of the embryonic planetary system, announcing the most complete census of its exocomets ever created. Their findings are published in Nature. (Scientific American is part of Nature Publishing Group.) Using eight years of archival data from the European Southern Observatorys HARPS planet-finding spectrograph, the team catalogued an unprecedented number of star-grazing comets around Beta Pictoris, detecting nearly 500 by the telltale absorption of starlight from their gassy tails passing in front of the star as seen from Earth. A few other stars are also known to harbor exocomets but never before have astronomers mapped such great numbers of these small, icy bodies so far beyond our solar system. This is a laudable study, and the determination of these researchers is remarkable, says Aki Roberge, an astronomer at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center who wrote a commentary to accompany the paper. On one hand, star-grazing comets were discovered around Beta Pictoris a long time ago but on the other hand this study is only possible through sustained, dedicated monitoring over many years. By carefully analyzing the speeds and estimated sizes of each detected cometary gas cloud selected from more than 1,000 HARPS observations, the team discovered that the comets are divided into two distinct familiesan outer family sedately circling the star at distances comparable with the separation of Mercury from the sun and an inner family exhibiting a wide range of velocities, orbiting even closer in. Curiously, the family farther out from the star seems to be producing far more gas than the closer-in cometsthe exact opposite of what would be expected, given that comets in our solar system tend to grow more active the closer they come to the intense heat of our sun. According to the studys lead author, Flavien Kiefer, an astronomer at the IAP, the likely explanation is that the inner family consists of older comets that have nearly depleted their reservoirs of gas and dust, whereas the outer family is composed of fresher or bigger comets produced from the recent fragmentation of a larger parent body. Based on the orientations of their scattered, close-in orbits, the inner cometary family also appears to be trapped in an orbital resonance, herded around the star by the gravitational influence of a nearby massive planetperhaps Beta Pictoris b, or maybe another world as yet unseen. This resonance is very similar to the influence of Jupiter in our own solar system, which produces most of the short-period comets around the sun, Kiefer says. We could be seeing some of the ejected remnants from the formation of Beta Pictoris b. Its like we are observing a much younger version of our sun, just after it formed its planets. One mystery still unsolved is the nature of the parent body that produced the outer belt of comets around the star. Kiefer says the parent body might have been an extra-large comet that came from the inner belt, something trapped in resonance with Beta Pictoris b. If the giant comet passed too close to the planet, gravitational forces could have pulled the comet apart, exposing fresh material to evaporate in starlight. But Roberge notes that the outer belts progenitor could have been planetary in size. In 2013 she was part of a team that used the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array of radio telescopes to discover two giant clouds of carbon monoxide at the outer fringes of the Beta Pictoris system. One possible explanation for the positioning and shape of the clouds was the gravitational sculpting from a giant, unseen planet far from the star but another was the recent, destructive collision of two Mars-mass icy worlds. Fragments from such a collision could have cascaded down into the inner parts of the system as a swarm of massive comets. If the carbon monoxide clumps were caused by this putative massive collision, then that could just possibly be connected to these fragments were now seeing, Roberge says. Whether thats actually the case, I dont know, but it would make me very happy if this all hung together like that. Pinning down the plausibility of this alternate formation scenario will depend on dynamical modeling of the fragments produced by such a cataclysmic collision as well as on future observations of the orbiting carbon monoxide clouds. Beyond the comets source, the greatest mystery concerning them is: Where is their water? Astronomers have yet to see any indication of it, despite years of searching. If these are icy, water-rich comets like we expect them to be, wed expect to see the water photoevaporating and getting broken up into daughter products like hydrogen and oxygenand we havent really seen that yet, Roberge says. No one has made a hard prediction for how much water should be there and whether we couldve seen it or not but we all have this burning question in the back of our minds. Someone will probably stick their neck out on this soon. If deeper investigations fail to show any sign of water in Beta Pictoriss comets, Kiefer says, the solution may be that they are actually quite different from our own. They may perhaps being made mostly of carbon monoxide or carbon dioxide ices rather than wateran unsettling prospect for astrobiologists hoping that most stars will harbor water-rich habitable worlds. He and his collaborators are already planning more in-depth studies of the stars comets as well as those of one of its siblings born from the same stellar nurserya star called HD 172555 that has already been revealed to have a few exocomets of its own. Roberge is also studying a handful of exocomets recently found around another star, 49 Ceti. Looking back on the recent history of a star far away but close to her heart, Lagrange feels vindicated by the ongoing waves of discovery. In the 1980s I didnt expect to still be working on Beta Pictoris 30 years later, she says, adding that she had been discouraged from studying the star for her PhD. Many people were very skeptical about the comet scenario, and did not believe that one could detect comets outside the solar system; it was barely known that solar system comets sometimes grazed the sun and evaporated. Im glad that this comet scenario has survived all these tests throughout the years.

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Hundreds of Comets Seen Orbiting Distant Solar System