TWO POPULATIONS OF DARK COMETS COULD TELL RESEARCHERS WHERE THE EARTH GOT ITS OCEANS
The Statesman|January 04, 2025
The water that makes up the oceans acts as a key ingredient for the development of life on Earth. However, scientists still do not know where the water here on Earth came from in the first place.
Darryl Z. Seligman
TWO POPULATIONS OF DARK COMETS COULD TELL RESEARCHERS WHERE THE EARTH GOT ITS OCEANS

One leading idea is that space rocks such as comets and asteroids delivered water to the Earth through impacts. As a planetary scientist, I'm curious about the kinds of space objects that could have led to the formation of the oceans. For the past few years, I've been studying a type of object that I called a dark comet—which could be just the culprit. In a new study my colleagues and I published in December 2024, we discovered two classes of these elusive dark comets.

What is a comet?

The solar system is teaming with small bodies such as comets and asteroids. These space rocks were fundamental building blocks of planets in the early solar system, while the remaining leftovers are the comets and asteroids seen today.

These objects are also avenues by which material can be transported throughout the solar system. These small worlds can contain things such as rubble, ice, and organic material as they fly through space. That's why researchers see them as good potential candidates for delivering ices such as water and carbon dioxide to the Earth while it was forming.

Traditionally, the difference between comets and asteroids is that comets have beautiful cometary tails. These tails form because comets have ice in them, while asteroids supposedly do not.

When a comet gets close to the Sun, these ices heat up and sublimate, which means they turn from ice into gas. The gas heats up because of the sunlight and is then blown off the comet's surface in a process called outgassing. This outgassing brings with it rubble and small dust grains, which reflect sunlight.

Asteroids, on the other hand, do not have cometary tails. Presumably, they are more like classic rocks without ice on their surfaces.

This story is from the January 04, 2025 edition of The Statesman.

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This story is from the January 04, 2025 edition of The Statesman.

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