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David Aguilar
(617) 495-7462
Christine Pulliam
(617) 495-7463
pubaffairs@cfa
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CfA Press Release
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Release No.: 01-08
For Release: 3:00 pm (EDT) July 31, 2001
(The following information is taken from a press release issued by
NASA on July 11, 2001.)
Video Animation Available
Stellar Apocalypse Yields First Evidence of Water Bearing Worlds
Beyond Our Solar System
Cambridge, MA--As an alien sun blazes through its death throes, it is apparently vaporizing a
surrounding swarm of comets, releasing a huge cloud of water vapor, a team of astronomers
reported today.
The discovery, reported in an article published in the journal Nature on July 12, is the result of
observations with the Submillimeter Wave Astronomy Satellite (SWAS), a small radio
observatory that NASA launched into space in December 1998.
The new SWAS observations provide the first evidence that extra-solar planetary systems contain
water, a molecule that is an essential ingredient for known forms of life. This result was the
subject of a NASA Space Science Update held at the NASA Headquarters auditorium in
Washington, D.C..
"Over the past two years, SWAS has detected water vapor from a wide variety of astronomical
sources," says Dr. Gary Melnick of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Principal
Investigator on the SWAS mission. "What makes the results we are reporting today so unusual is
that we have found a cloud of water vapor around a star where we would not ordinarily have
expected to find water."
The star in question is an aging giant star designated by astronomers as IRC+10216, also known
as CW Leonis, located 500 light years (almost 3,000 trillion miles) from Earth in the direction of
the constellation Leo.
"IRC+10216 is a carbon-rich star in which the concentration of carbon exceeds that of oxygen,"
explains Melnick. "In such stars, we expect all the oxygen atoms to be bound up in the form of
carbon monoxide (an oxygen atom and a carbon atom bound together), with almost nothing left
over to form water (one oxygen atom bound to two hydrogen atoms). Yet we see substantial
concentrations of water vapor around this star; the most plausible explanation for this water vapor
is that it is being vaporized from the surfaces of orbiting comets, 'dirty snowballs' that are
composed primarily of water ice."
From its vantage point in orbit above the absorbing effects of water in Earth's atmosphere, SWAS
is capable of detecting the distinctive radiation emitted by water vapor in space. The observations
of water vapor around IRC+10216 suggest that other stars may be surrounded by planetary
systems similar to our own. Over the past decade, more than 50 stars have been shown to have
large planets in orbit around them, but little is known about the composition of those planets.
In order to explain the water vapor concentration that SWAS has detected, several hundred
billion comets would be needed at distances from the star between 75 and 300 times the distance
of the Earth from the Sun. "That sounds like a lot," comments Saavik Ford, a Johns Hopkins
graduate student who is a co-author on the article reporting the discovery. "But the total mass
required of this swarm of orbiting comets is similar to the original mass of the Kuiper Belt, a
collection of comets that orbits our own Sun beyond the orbit of Neptune. In our own solar
system, these comets orbit the Sun quietly for the most part; occasionally a comet comes in close
to the Sun, starts to vaporize, and displays the characteristic coma and tail that we are familiar
with. But IRC+10216 is so much more luminous than the Sun that comets start to vaporize even
at the distance of the Kuiper Belt. So one has several hundred billion comets all vaporizing at
once."
The SWAS observations of IRC+10216 paint a picture of the future of our solar system. "We
think we are witnessing the type of apocalypse that will ultimately befall our own planetary
system," says SWAS team member Dr. David Neufeld, professor of physics and astronomy at
Johns Hopkins. "Several billion years from now, the Sun will become a giant star and its power
output will increase five thousand fold. As the luminosity of the Sun increases, a wave of water
vaporization will spread outwards through the solar system, starting with Earth's oceans and
extending well beyond the orbit of Neptune. Icy bodies as large as Pluto will be mostly
vaporized, leaving a cinder of hot rock."
SWAS was built and operated by NASA with support from the German government and the
participation of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, the University of
Massachusetts at Amherst, Cornell University, the Johns Hopkins University, the University of
Cologne, Ball Aerospace, and Millitech (now Telaxis Communication Corp.).
In addition to Melnick, Neufeld and Ford, the other co-authors on the article reporting the new
results on IRC+10216 are Dr. David Hollenbach of NASA's Ames Research Center and Dr.
Matthew Ashby of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.
Additional images associated with this press release can be found here.
Contact Information:
David A. Aguilar
Director of Public Affairs
Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics
617-495-7462
daguilar@cfa.harvard.edu
Video Animation Information:
David A. Aguilar
Director of Public Affairs
Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics
617-495-7462
daguilar@cfa.harvard.edu
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