Imagine if the rings of Saturn suddenly disappeared. Astronomers have witnessed the equivalent around a young sun-like star called TYC 8241 2652. Enormous amounts of dust known to circle the star are unexpectedly nowhere to be found.
"It's like the classic magician's trick: now you see it, now you don't. Only in this case we're talking about enough dust to fill an inner solar system and it really is gone!" said Carl Melis of the University of California, San Diego, who led the new study appearing in the July 5 issue of the journal Nature.
A dusty disk around TYC 8241 2652 was first seen by the NASA Infrared Astronomical Satellite (IRAS) in 1983, and continued to glow brightly for 25 years. The dust was thought to be due to collisions between forming planets, a normal part of planet formation. Like Earth, warm dust absorbs the energy of visible starlight and reradiates that energy as infrared, or heat, radiation.
The first strong indication of the disk's disappearance came from images taken in January 2010 by NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer, or WISE. An infrared image obtained at the Gemini telescope in Chile on May 1, 2012, confirmed that the dust has now been gone for two-and-a-half years.
Perhaps something collected it?
Perhaps something collected it?
Dyson Dust Corp
M Paul Lloyd wrote:I'm still clinging to the idea that the stars solar wind blew it away, after all our solar system is relatively free of such material and I'm pretty sure the same principle applies.
M Paul Lloyd wrote:I wouldn't like to guess but I'm left wondering if our ideas about the rate of such changes are quite as accurate as we like to think?
Shadowwolf wrote: This is a much younger system, besides if the solar wind could blow it away so rapidly then would that not prevent planets from ever forming as their constituent material is ejected?
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