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Longue interview du Chairman du Département d'astronomie de Harvard, au sujet de l'astéroïde Oumuamua qui avait beaucoup fait parler fin 2017 (forme très bizarre, venant d'un autre système solaire) : https://www.haaretz.com/us-news/.premiu … -1.6828318

Toutes les données disponibles (trajectoire, luminosité, vitesse) a son sujet ont été étudiées et certains résultats sont étonnants :

I wrote above that Oumuamua originated at Vega, but that's not completely accurate: The universe is a vast place, and even at Oumuamua's velocity – a velocity that no human spaceship has achieved – a voyage from Vega to the solar system would take 600,000 years. But in the meantime, Vega is orbiting the center of the Milky Way, like the sun and all the other stars, and it wasn't in that region of the heavens 600,000 years ago.
"If you average the velocities of all the stars in the region," Loeb explains, "you get a system that's called the 'local standard of rest.' Oumuamua was at rest relative to that system. It didn't come to us. It waited in place, like a buoy on the surface of the ocean, until the 'ship' of the solar system ran into it. To make things clear, only one of 500 stars in the system is as much at rest as Oumuamua. The probability of that is very low. After all, if it were a stone that was simply hurled from a different solar system, we would expect it to have the velocity of its star system, not the average velocity of all the thousands of stars in the vicinity."

However, the biggest surprise came last June, when new data from the Hubble Space Telescope showed that the mysterious object had accelerated during its visit to the inner solar system in 2017 – an acceleration that is not explained by the sun's force of gravity.

Acceleration of that sort can be explained by the rocket effect of comets: The comet approaches the sun, the sun warms the ice of the comet and the ice escapes into space in the form of gas, an emission that makes the comet accelerate like a rocket. But the observations did not reveal a comet tail behind Oumuamua. Moreover, gas emission would have brought about a rapid change in the rate of the object's spin, a change which was also not observed in practice, and it also might have torn the object apart.

If it wasn't comet outgassing, what force caused Oumuamua to accelerate? It is precisely here where Loeb enters the picture. According to his calculations, Oumuamua's acceleration was caused by a push.

"The only hypothesis I could think of," he relates, "is a push from solar radiation pressure. For that to work, the object would have to be very thin, less than a millimeter thick, in other words a type of pancake. In addition, the Spitzer Space Telescope found no evidence of heat emission from the object, and that means that it is at least 10 times more reflective than a typical comet or asteroid. What we have, then, is a thin, flat, shiny object. So I arrived at the idea of a solar sail: A solar sail is a spaceship that uses the sun for propulsion. Instead of using fuel, it is propelled ahead by reflecting light. In fact, it's a technology that our civilization is developing at this very time."