ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Intrinsically faint comets in nearly-parabolic orbits with perihelion distances much smaller than 1 AU exhibit strong propensity for suddenly disintegrating at a time not long before perihelion, as shown by Bortle (1991). Evidence from available observations of such comets suggests that the disintegration event usually begins with an outburst and that the debris is typically a massive cloud of dust grains that survives over a limited period of time. Recent CCD observations revealed, however, that also surviving could be a sizable fragment, resembling a devolatilized aggregate of loosely-bound dust grains that may have exotic shape, peculiar rotational properties, and extremely high porosity, all acquired in the course of the disintegration event. Given that the brightness of 1I/`Oumuamuas parent could not possibly equal or exceed the Bortle survival limit, there are reasons to believe that it suffered the same fate as do the frail comets. The post-perihelion observations then do not refer to the object that was entering the inner Solar System in early 2017, as is tacitly assumed, but to its debris. Comparison with C/2017 S3 and C/2010 X1 suggests that, as a monstrous fluffy dust aggregate released in the recent explosive event, `Oumuamua should be of strongly irregular shape, tumbling, not outgassing, and subjected to effects of solar radiation pressure, consistent with observation. The unknown timing of the disintegration event may compromise studies of the parents home stellar system. Limited search for possible images of the object to constrain the time of the (probably minor) outburst is recommended.
1I/`Oumuamua is the first confirmed interstellar body in our Solar System. Here we report on observations of `Oumuamua made with the Spitzer Space Telescope on 2017 November 21--22 (UT). We integrated for 30.2~hours at 4.5 micron (IRAC channel 2). We
1I/Oumuamua is the first interstellar object observed passing through the Solar System. Understanding the nature of these objects will provide crucial information about the formation and evolution of planetary systems, and the chemodynamical evolutio
The initial Galactic velocity vector for the recently discovered hyperbolic asteroid 1I/Oumuamua (A/2017 U1) is calculated for before its encounter with our solar system. The latest orbit (JPL-13) shows that Oumuamua has eccentricity > 1 at 944sigma,
We study the origin of the interstellar object 1I/2017 U1 Oumuamua by juxtaposing estimates based on the observations with simulations. We speculate that objects like Oumuamua are formed in the debris disc as left over from the star and planet format
The results of the photometric observations of comet C/2009 P1 (Garradd) performed at the 60-cm Zeiss-600 telescope of the Terskol observatory have been analyzed. During the observations, the comet was at the heliocentric and geocentric distances of