Envelops of dark comets, prowling the solar system, may be posing a deadly threat to Earth.
Hazardous comets and asteroids are monitored by various space agencies under an umbrella effort known as Space Guard. The vast majority of objects found so far are rocky asteroids. Yet UK-based astronomers Bill Napier at Cardiff University and David Asher at Armagh Observatory, Northern Ireland, claim that many comets could be going undetected. "There is a case to be made that dark, dormant comets are a significant but largely unseen hazard," says Napier.
In previous work, Napier and Janaki Wickramasinghe, also at Cardiff, have suggested that when the solar system periodically passes through the galactic plane, it nudges comets in our direction, New Scientist, 19 April 2008.
These periodic comet showers appear to correlate with the dates of ancient impact craters found on Earth, which would suggest that most impactors in the past were comets, not asteroids.
Now Napier and Asher warn that some of these comets may still be zipping around the solar system. Other observations support their case. The rate that bright comets enter the solar system implies there should be around 3000 of them buzzing around, and yet only 25 are known.
In 1983, Comet IRAS-Araki-Alcock passed by Earth at a distance of 5 million kilometers; the closest known passed by any known comet for 200 years. It was spotted only two weeks ahead of its closest approach.
Clark Chapman at the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado, is sceptical, but points out that such dark comet "would absorb sunlight very well" and so could be detected by the heat they would emit.
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