Wednesday 18 February 2015

Was this Star Nibiru? Scientists Discover Star Made Closest Approach to Our Solar System 70,000 Years Ago





Astronomers identify the closest known flyby of a star to our solar system Photo Credit: Flickr


Excerpt from americanlivewire.com




A low-mass red dwarf star passed

through the outer Oort Cloud 70,000 years back in the closest approach

made by any star into our system, discovers a team of researchers from

various countries.

Lying in the constellation Monoceros and known as Scholtz’s star, it

is a part of a binary system and has 8% the mass of the sun. Its

companion, a brown dwarf, is said to have 6%.

The lowest end of the stellar spectrum, brown dwarfs are larger than

gas giants but not as much so as to sustain hydrogen fusion for a larger

period of time.

Due to its faint appearance, Scholtz’s star was discovered only a

year ago by astronomer Ralf Dieter-Scholz in Potsdam, Germany, through

the use of NASA’s WISE (Wide Field Infrared Survey Explorer), which

mapped the entire sky in infrared during the years 2010 and 2011.


At the same time, the radial velocity of the star depicted that it

was moving away from the solar system much faster than expected.

These motions led the researchers to conclude that either the star is headed toward our system, or moving away from it.


After analyzing the data, Mamajek concluded, “…The radial velocity

measurements were consistent with it running away from the Sun’s

vicinity–and we realized it must have had a close flyby in the past.”


Through the use of computer models, it was seen that the star passed

about 5 trillion miles from our solar system around 70,000 years ago.


Mamajek and his team are 98 percent certain Scholtz’s star traveled through the outer Oort Cloud.


Although Scholtz’s star is 10th magnitude, too dim to be seen with

the naked eye, it is magnetically active, which can cause it to flare at

times and become significantly brighter. If this happened during its

close approach to our solar system, prehistoric humans might have

actually seen it.


The researchers published their findings in Astrophysical Journal Letters.





Source Article from http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/AscensionEarth2012/~3/55qUkX3LPW8/was-this-star-nibiru-scientists.html



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