Gliese 710: A Star Only 64 Light Years Away and Barreling Directly Toward Earth at 32,000 mph
In just over a million years, Earths’ inhabitants will get a closer look at a star than they might want. Gliese 710 is currently a safe 64 light years away, but scientists discovered in 1999 that the sun-like star was barreling directly toward us at around 32,000 mph. We’ve known for awhile that it would closely pass by our solar system, but Polish astronomers have calculated that it could end up a mere 40 light days away. That would easily be close enough to deflect the orbit of asteroids or comets in our solar system’s Oort Cloud, potentially toward Earth.
That’s about five times closer than previously thought, astronomers from Adam Mickiewicz University in Poland say. To arrive at that figure, they used measurements from ESA’s Gaia space observatory that are ten times more accurate than before. There’s still an error of around 50 percent, however, so the star could actually come as close as 7,250 astronomical units (AUs) or around 0.11 light years (40 light days).
The Oort cloud ranges from 0.8 to 3.16 light years from the sun, with potentially billions of asteroids, comets and other cosmic detritus that Gliese 710 could feasibly deflect or smash into. The researchers believe the star could actually pull about 0.1 percent, or 100 million Oort objects out of the cloud to follow it on it’s journey. It could also deflect a bunch more asteroids comets and other debris toward the inner solar system, causing enormous meteor showers and the appearance of hundreds of new comets per year for several million years.Some researchers believe that a similar close pass by a star around 65 million years ago is responsible for the meteor shower that wiped out the dinosaurs but they have yet to show any proof of their hypothesis. However, that could be minor compared to the Gliese 710 event. At its closest distance, it will be the brightest and fastest moving object in the sky, and will be the “strongest disrupting encounter in the future and history of the solar system,” the paper states.
As mentioned, the star is currently over a million years away, and there are thousands of other things that could wipe us out before then. Nevertheless, your great grandchildren, 40,000 times removed, might be grateful if we get a start on that asteroid deflection scheme as soon as possible.
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