Evidence points to planet collision

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Masses of dust floating around a distant binary star system suggest that two Earth-like planets obliterated each other in a violent collision, US researchers reported on Friday.

"It's as if Earth and Venus collided with each other," Benjamin Zuckerman, an astronomer at the University of California Los Angeles, who worked on the study, said in a statement.

"Astronomers have never seen anything like this before; apparently major, catastrophic, collisions can take place in a fully mature planetary system."

Writing in the Astrophysical Journal, the team at UCLA, Tennessee State University and the California Institute of Technology said it spotted the dust orbiting a star known as BD +20 307, 300 million light-years from Earth in the constellation Aries.

A light-year is the distance light travels in a year, or about 6 trillion miles. So the observations are, in essence, looking back in time 300 million years.

"If any life was present on either planet, the massive collision would have wiped out everything in a matter of minutes: the ultimate extinction event," said Gregory Henry of Tennessee State University.

BD +20 307 appears to be composed of two stars, both very similar in mass, temperature and size to the Earth's sun. They spin about their common centre of mass every 3 1/2 days or so.

"The planetary collision in BD +20 307 was not observed directly but, rather, was inferred from the extraordinary quantity of dust particles that orbit the binary pair at about the same distance as Earth and Venus are from our sun," Henry said.

"If this dust does indeed point to the presence of terrestrial planets, then this represents the first known example of planets of any mass in orbit around a close binary star."
In July 2005, the team reported it had spotted the system, then believed to consist of a single star. It was surrounded by more warm orbiting dust than any other sun-like star known to astronomers.

"This poses two very interesting questions," said Tennessee State's Francis Fekel. "How do planetary orbits become destabilized in such an old, mature system? Could such a collision happen in our own solar system?"
  • added September 20, 2008
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32 responses // Evidence points to planet collision

  •  

    maybe they started their Large Hadron Collider and mini black hole swallowed them up . . .

    Earthwalker
  •  

    Where did our moon come from?

    NeoDotCom
  •  

    as if millions of voices cried out in terror and were suddenly silenced.

    xenothaulus
  •  

    I don't think we have to worry about a p0lanet hitting us, however an asteroid could hit us and do some serious damage.

    zman14u
  •  

    Frightening

    scvar
  •  

    This raises some questions. Should we be spending so much on National Security or should we spend more on Life Protection, such as systems to prevent injury from Asteroid impact?

    kaecvtionr
  •  

    maybe we are just a grain in god's salt shaker after all!

    mmaysville1
  •  

    That picture is really depressing...

    Logos51891
  •  

    something like this isn't that hard to explain, being that it's a binary system.

    As the two stars move around the center of mass, they destabilize the the orbital fields of the planets within the system on a regular basis, making something like planetary collision a high probability as the prominent gravitational fields shifted from one star to another, causing the planets to come close enough to pull one another in causing the planets to collide and be simultaneously wiped out. (Did i lose anyone there?)

    One could only hope the planets hadn't developed life, simply to spare the innocent inhabitants an inevitable and horrifying death.

    MetalMilitia
  •  

    That's how the Earths gonna end! Just wait for it in 2012! You'll see! You'll all see!

    Johnny_Danger
  •  

    whoa, planets running into each other
    talk about the ultimate natural disaster!

    TrevTar
  •  

    i don't think this is anything new. i've heard of this theory in documentaries before. it mentioned something about earth having a twin sister that were very close in orbit and eventually collided. Then through trillions of years of gravity, etc. it formed the landmass that we live on today

    nateyp123
  •  

    CORRECTION! it is not 300 million loght-years from earth,it's just 300.star it self is old 300m years!!
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BD_%2B20%C2%B0307

    martinez
  •  

    There but for it not actually happening goes our planet... We're lucky it was 'only' a Mars-sized object which hit us during our solar system's formation.

    rwylie

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