Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    SciTechDaily
    • Biology
    • Chemistry
    • Earth
    • Health
    • Physics
    • Science
    • Space
    • Technology
    Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube RSS
    SciTechDaily
    Home»Space»Spacecraft in Sun’s Backyard Unravels the Origins of Interplanetary Dust
    Space

    Spacecraft in Sun’s Backyard Unravels the Origins of Interplanetary Dust

    By Princeton UniversitySeptember 13, 2021No Comments8 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn WhatsApp Email Reddit
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Telegram Email Reddit


    Scientists using data from NASA’s Parker Solar Probe have assembled the most complete picture yet of the inner structure and behavior of the large cloud of space dust, known as the zodiacal cloud, that swirls throughout the solar system. They found three dust populations in the cloud. Most of the grains are being slowly pulled in toward the Sun (alpha-meteoroids); the second population is generated as grains in the swirling cloud collide, creating fragments so small that they are pushed out of the solar system in all directions by pressure from sunlight (beta-meteoroids); and a third group, probably created when a “tube” of cometary debris collides with grains from the first two populations, that is scattered out in a distinctive wedge shape. Credit: Animation by Mike Buckley, Johns Hopkins University/NASA Applied Physics Laboratory

    What Do Shooting Stars and Astronaut Safety Have in Common?

    Both stem from the sub-microscopic rock fragments found throughout the solar system, sometimes called interplanetary dust.

    When these particles collide with Earth’s atmosphere, they create meteors, better known as shooting stars, as the (usually) microscopic fragments vaporize and leave flaming trails through the air. When they collide with astronauts, they can puncture holes in space suits — or worse. Understanding the sources and patterns of this interplanetary dust is therefore very important to NASA, as it plans for missions to the moon, Mars, and beyond.

    During its revolutions around the sun, the Parker Solar Probe spacecraft, the mission going closer to the sun than anything in spacefaring history, is bombarded by these dust particles. When crashing onto the spacecraft, the tiny grains — some as small as a ten-thousandth of a millimeter across — vaporize and release a cloud of electrically charged particles that can be detected by FIELDS, a suite of instruments designed to detect electric and magnetic fields.

    A pair of papers publishing this week in the Planetary Science Journal use FIELDS data to take an up-close look at the “zodiacal cloud,” the collective term for these tiny particles.

    “Every solar system has a zodiacal cloud, and we actually get to explore ours and understand how it works,” said Jamey Szalay, an associate research scholar in astrophysical sciences at Princeton who is the lead author on one of the papers. “Understanding the evolution and dynamics of our zodiacal cloud will allow us to better understand every zodiacal observation we’ve seen around any other solar system.”

    The zodiacal cloud scatters sunlight in a way that can be seen with the naked eye, but only on very dark, clear nights, as moonlight or light from cities both easily outshine it. Thickest near the sun and thinnest near the edges of the solar system, the zodiacal cloud looks smooth to the naked eye, but infrared wavelengths reveal bright streaks and ribbons that can be traced back to their sources: comets and asteroids.

    Visible and Invisible Patterns in Dust

    With data from Parker’s first six orbits, together with computer modeling of the particle motion in the inner solar system, Szalay and his colleagues disentangled those streaks and ribbons to reveal two different populations of dust in the zodiacal cloud: the tiny grains ever-so-slowly spiraling in towards the sun over thousands to millions of years, known as alpha-meteoroids; and then, as the swirling cloud gets denser, the larger grains collide and create ever-smaller fragments known as beta-meteoroids that are subsequently pushed away from the sun by the pressure from sunlight.

    Yes, sunlight.

    And not just nudged a bit, either. “When a fragment becomes small enough, radiation pressure — solar light — is actually strong enough to blow it out of the solar system,” Szalay said.

    “The existence of such tiny grains was repeatedly reported from dedicated spacecraft dust measurements in the region between Earth and Mars, but never in the inner solar system where these particles were thought to originate,” said Harald Krüger, a zodiacal dust expert with the Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research and a co-author on Szalay’s paper. “Thus, the FIELDS instrument offers a new window to study these solar light-driven dust particles close to their source region.”

    Dust Origins: Comets, Asteroids, and Tubes

    FIELDS also detected a narrow stream of particles that appeared to be released from a discrete source, forming a delicate structure in the zodiacal dust cloud. To understand this third component, Szalay went back to the origins of the zodiacal dust: comets and asteroids.

    Comets, dust-filled snowballs traveling through our solar system in long, elliptical orbits, eject copious amounts of dust when they get close enough to the sun to start vaporizing their ice and dry ice. Asteroids, large and small rocks orbiting the sun between Mars and Jupiter, release dust when they collide with each other. Some of these grains are knocked off in any direction, but most are trapped in the orbits of their parent body, explained Szalay, meaning that over the course of thousands of orbits, a comet’s track becomes more like a gravel road than an empty path with one shining orb and a bright trail. (Over millions of orbits, the grains will scatter beyond their orbital path, merging into the zodiacal background cloud.)

    Szalay refers to these dust-strewn paths as “tubes” of cometary or asteroidal debris. “If Earth crosses that tube in any place, we get a meteor shower,” he said.

    He theorized that the Parker Solar Probe may have traveled through one of these. “Maybe there’s a dense tube that we just couldn’t have observed any other way other than by Parker literally flying through and getting sandblasted by it,” he said.

    But the tubes closest to Parker’s path didn’t seem to have enough material to cause the data spike. So Szalay proposed another theory. Maybe one of these meteoroid tubes — most likely the Geminids, which every December cause one of Earth’s most intense meteor showers — was colliding at high speeds against the inner zodiacal cloud itself. The impacts between the tube and zodiacal dust could produce large quantities of beta-meteoroids that don’t blast off in random directions, but are focused into a narrow set of paths.

    “We’ve termed this a ‘beta-stream,’ which is a new contribution to the field,” Szalay said. “These beta-streams are expected to be a fundamental physical process at all circumstellar planetary disks.”

    A First-of-Its-Kind Look into Dust Collisions Near the Sun

    “One of the important aspects of this article is the fact that Parker Solar Probe is the first spacecraft that reaches so close to the Sun that it penetrates the regions where mutual particle collisions are the most frequent,” said Petr Pokorný, a zodiacal cloud modeler with NASA and the Catholic University of America, who was a co-author on Szalay’s paper. “Mutual particle collisions are important not only in our solar system, but in all exosolar systems. This article gives the modeling community a unique insight into this previously uncharted territory.”

    “Parker essentially experienced its own meteor shower,” Szalay said. “It either flew through one of those tubes of material, or it flew through a beta-stream.”

    The stream was also spotted by Anna Pusack, then an undergraduate at the University of Colorado-Boulder. “I saw this wedge-like shape in my data, and my advisor, David Malaspina, suggested I present the work to Jamey,” she said. “The wedge shape seemed to indicate a strong spray, or what Jamey called a beta-stream in his new models, of small particles hitting the spacecraft in a very directed manner. This was incredible for me, to connect the data I had analyzed to theoretical work done on the other side of the country. For a young scientist, it really sparked all the excitement and possibility that can come from collaborative work.”

    Pusack is the lead author on the paper being published jointly with Szalay’s. “These papers really do go hand in hand,” she said. “The data supports the models, and the models help explain the data.”

    “This is a tremendous contribution to our understanding of the zodiacal cloud, the near-sun dust environment more broadly, and the dust risks to NASA’s Parker Solar Probe mission,” said David McComas, a professor of astrophysical sciences at Princeton University and the vice president for the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, who is the principal investigator for ISʘIS, another instrument on board Parker Solar Probe, and for the upcoming Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe (IMAP) mission. 

    References:

    “Collisional Evolution of the Inner Zodiacal Cloud” by J.R. Szalay, P. Pokorný, D.M. Malaspina, A. Pusack, S.D. Bale, K. Battams, L.C. Gasque, K. Goetz, H. Krüger, D.J. McComas, N.A. Schwadron, and P. Strub, 9 September 2021, Planetary Science Journal.
    DOI: 10.3847/PSJ/abf928

    “Dust Directionality and an Anomalous Interplanetary Dust Population Detected by the Parker Solar Probe” by A. Pusack, D.M. Malaspina, J.R. Szalay, S.D. Bale, K. Goetz, R.J. MacDowall, and M. Pulupa,, 9 September 2021, Planetary Science Journal.
    DOI: 10.3847/PSJ/ac0bb9

    The research was supported by NASA (NNN06AA01C, 80NSSC21K0153) and the European Space Acency (4000106316/12/NL/AF – IMEX).

    The FIELDS experiment on the Parker Solar Probe spacecraft was designed and developed under NASA contract NNN06AA01C.

    Never miss a breakthrough: Join the SciTechDaily newsletter.
    Follow us on Google and Google News.

    Astronomy Astrophysics Popular Princeton University
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Email Reddit

    Related Articles

    Scientists Just Snapped the Clearest Image of the Universe’s First Light

    Einstein’s Twist: Princeton Astrophysicists Unravel the Mystery of Black Hole Jets and Galactic “Lightsabers”

    How To See the Invisible: Measuring Dark Matter With Hyper Suprime-Cam Reveals Discrepancy

    Groundbreaking New Dark Matter Map Validates Einstein’s Theory of General Relativity

    A Doomed World: Astronomers Discover an Exoplanet Spiraling Toward Its Destruction

    AI Detects Incredible Stream of Stars That Extends Thousands of Light-Years Across the Milky Way

    Astronomers Discover Mysterious Blue Ring Nebula, See the Fate of Binary Stars

    Artificial Intelligence Predicts Which Planetary Systems Will Survive 100,000 Times Faster

    Scientists Convene to Take a Picture of the Supermassive Black Hole at the Center of the Milky Way

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • YouTube

    Don't Miss a Discovery

    Subscribe for the Latest in Science & Tech!

    Trending News

    One of the Universe’s Largest Stars May Be Getting Ready To Explode

    Scientists Discover Enzyme That Could Supercharge Ozempic-Like Weight Loss Drugs

    Popular Sweetener Linked to DNA Damage – “It’s Something You Should Not Be Eating”

    Ancient “Rock” Microbes May Reveal How Complex Life Began

    Researchers Capture Quantum Interference in One of Nature’s Rarest Atoms

    “A Plague Is Upon Us”: The Mass Death That Changed an Ancient City Forever

    Scientists Discover Game-Changing New Way To Treat High Cholesterol

    This Small Change to Your Exercise Routine Could Be the Secret to Living Longer

    Follow SciTechDaily
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • YouTube
    • Pinterest
    • Newsletter
    • RSS
    SciTech News
    • Biology News
    • Chemistry News
    • Earth News
    • Health News
    • Physics News
    • Science News
    • Space News
    • Technology News
    Recent Posts
    • Revolutionary Imaging Technique Unlocks Secrets of Matter at Extreme Speeds
    • Where Does Mass Come From? Scientists Find Evidence of a New Exotic Nuclear State
    • Quantum Breakthrough: Unhackable Keys Sent Over 120 km Using Quantum Dots
    • Researchers Discover Unknown Beetle Species Just Steps From Their Lab
    • Jellyfish Caught Feasting on Exploding Sea Worms for the First Time
    Copyright © 1998 - 2026 SciTechDaily. All Rights Reserved.
    • Science News
    • About
    • Contact
    • Editorial Board
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.