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NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope has enabled
another long-sought scientific breakthrough, this time for solar system
scientists studying the origins
of Earth’s abundant water. Using Webb’s NIRSpec (Near-Infrared Spectrograph)
instrument, astronomers have confirmed gas – specifically water vapor – around
a comet in the main asteroid belt for the first time, indicating that water ice
from the primordial solar system can be preserved in that region. However, the
successful detection of water comes with a new puzzle: unlike other comets,
Comet 238P/Read had no detectable carbon dioxide.
This graphic presentation of spectral data highlights a key similarity and difference between observations of Comet 238P/Read by the NIRSpec (Near-Infrared Spectrograph) instrument on NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope in 2022 and observations of Comet 103P/Hartley 2 by NASA’s Deep Impact mission in 2010. Both show a distinct peak in the region of the spectrum associated with water. Finding this in Comet Read was a significant accomplishment for Webb, as it is in a different class of comets than Jupiter-family comets like Hartley 2, and this marks the first time that a gas has been confirmed in such a main belt comet. However, Comet Read did not show the characteristic, expected bump indicating the presence of carbon dioxide. Credits: NASA, ESA, CSA, and J. Olmsted (STScI)
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full-resolution image from the Space Telescope Science Institute
This artist’s concept of Comet 238P/Read shows the main belt comet sublimating—its water ice vaporizing as its orbit approaches the Sun. This is significant, as the sublimation is what distinguishes comets from asteroids, creating their distinctive tail and hazy halo, or coma. The James Webb Space Telescope’s detection of water vapor at Comet Read is a major benchmark in the study of main belt comets, and in the broader investigation of the origin of Earth’s abundant water. Credits: NASA, ESA
Download the
full-resolution image from the Space Telescope Science Institute
“Our water-soaked
world, teeming with life and unique in the universe as far as we know, is
something of a mystery – we’re not sure how all this water got here,” said Stefanie
Milam, Webb deputy project scientist for planetary science and a co-author on
the study reporting the finding. “Understanding the history of water
distribution in the solar system will help us to understand other planetary
systems, and if they could be on their way to hosting an Earth-like planet,”
she added.
Comet Read is a main belt comet – an
object that resides in the main asteroid belt but which periodically displays a
halo, or coma, and tail like a comet. Main belt comets themselves are a fairly
new classification, and Comet Read was one of the original three comets used to
establish the category. Before that, comets were understood to reside in the
Kuiper Belt and Oort Cloud, beyond the orbit of Neptune, where their ices could
be preserved farther from the Sun. Frozen material that vaporizes as they
approach the Sun is what gives comets their distinctive coma and streaming
tail, differentiating them from asteroids. Scientists have long speculated that
water ice could be preserved in the warmer asteroid belt, inside the orbit of
Jupiter, but definitive proof was elusive – until Webb.
“In the past, we’ve seen objects in the
main belt with all the characteristics of comets, but only with this precise
spectral data from Webb can we say yes, it’s definitely water ice that is
creating that effect,” explained astronomer Michael Kelley of the University of
Maryland, lead author of the study.
“With Webb’s observations of Comet Read,
we can now demonstrate that water ice from the early solar system can be
preserved in the asteroid belt,” Kelley said.
The missing carbon dioxide was a bigger
surprise. Typically, carbon dioxide makes up about 10 percent of the volatile material
in a comet that can be easily vaporized by the Sun’s heat. The science team
presents two possible explanations for the lack of carbon dioxide. One
possibility is that Comet Read had carbon dioxide when it formed but has lost
that because of warm temperatures.
“Being in the asteroid belt for a long
time could do it – carbon dioxide vaporizes more easily than water ice, and
could percolate out over billions of years,” Kelley said. Alternatively, he
said, Comet Read may have formed in a particularly warm pocket of the solar
system, where no carbon dioxide was available.
This image of Comet 238P/Read was captured by the NIRCam (Near-Infrared Camera) instrument on NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope on September 8, 2022. It displays the hazy halo, called the coma, and tail that are characteristic of comets, as opposed to asteroids. The dusty coma and tail result from the vaporization of ices as the Sun warms the main body of the comet. Credits: NASA, ESA, CSA, M. Kelley (University of Maryland). Image processing: H. Hsieh (Planetary Science Institute), A. Pagan (STScI)
Download the
full-resolution image from the Space Telescope Science Institute
The next step is taking the
research beyond Comet Read to see how other main belt comets compare, says
astronomer Heidi Hammel of the Association of Universities for Research in
Astronomy (AURA), lead for Webb’s Guaranteed Time
Observations for
solar system objects and co-author of the study. “These objects in the asteroid
belt are small and faint, and with Webb we can finally see what is going on
with them and draw some conclusions. Do other main belt comets also lack carbon
dioxide? Either way it will be exciting to find out,” Hammel said.
Co-author Milam imagines the
possibilities of bringing the research even closer to home. “Now that Webb has
confirmed there is water preserved as close as the asteroid belt, it would be
fascinating to follow up on this discovery with a sample collection mission,
and learn what else the main belt comets can tell us.”
The study is published in the
journal Nature.
The James Webb Space Telescope is the world’s premier space science observatory. Webb will solve mysteries in our solar system, look beyond to distant worlds around other stars, and probe the mysterious structures and origins of our universe and our place in it. Webb is an international program led by NASA with its partners, ESA (European Space Agency) and the Canadian Space Agency.
Source: NASA’s Webb Finds Water, and a New Mystery, in Rare Main Belt Comet | NASA
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