PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

NAU-led team discovers comet hiding in plain sight

2013-09-11
(Press-News.org) For 30 years, a large near-Earth asteroid wandered its lone, intrepid path, passing before the scrutinizing eyes of scientists while keeping something to itself: (3552) Don Quixote, whose journey stretches to the orbit of Jupiter, now appears to be a comet.

The discovery resulted from an ongoing project coordinated by researchers at Northern Arizona University using the Spitzer Space Telescope. Through a lot of focused attention and a little bit of luck, they found evidence of cometary activity that had evaded detection for three decades.

"Don Quixote's orbit resembles that of a comet, so people assumed it was a comet that had gotten rid of all its ice deposits thousands of years ago," said Michael Mommert, a Ph.D. student of team member Prof. Alan Harris at the German Aerospace Center (DLR) in Berlin at the time this work was carried out. Near-Earth asteroids that are former comets make up roughly 5 percent of the whole near-Earth asteroid population, as found by Mommert and colleagues in a related study. These objects are mostly "dead comets" – comets that had shed the carbon dioxide and water that give them their spectacular comae and tails long time ago.

What Mommert, now a post-doctoral researcher at NAU, and an international team of researchers discovered, though, was that Don Quixote was not actually a dead comet. In fact, the third-biggest near-Earth asteroid out there, skirting Earth with an erratic, extended orbit, is "sopping wet," said NAU associate professor David Trilling, with large deposits of carbon dioxide and presumably water ice.

Finding evidence of carbon dioxide wasn't easy. During an observation of the object using Spitzer in August 2009, Mommert and colleagues found that it was far brighter than they expected. "The images were not as clean as we would like, so we set them aside," Trilling said.

Much later, though, Mommert prompted a closer look, and partners at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics found something unusual when comparing the infrared images of the object: something, that is, where an asteroid would have shown nothing. The processed images indicated that Don Quixote had a coma and a faint tail.

"This discovery of carbon dioxide emission from Don Quixote required the sensitivity and infrared wavelengths of the Spitzer telescope and would not have been possible using optical telescopes on the ground," Mommert said. This discovery implies that carbon dioxide and water ice might be present on other near-Earth asteroids, as well.

The implications have less to do with a potential impact, which is extremely unlikely in this case, and more with "the origins of water on Earth," Trilling said. Comets may be the source of at least some of it, and the amount on Don Quixote represents about 100 billion tons of water—roughly the same amount that can be found in Lake Tahoe, California.

This study has confirmed Don Quixote's size and the low, comet-like reflectivity of its surface. Mommert is presenting the research team's findings at the European Planetary Science Congress in London in early September. The results of this study have been submitted to the Astrophysical Journal for publication. Michael Mommert's work at the DLR's Institute of Planetary Research in Berlin was funded by Grant HA 2914/2-2 from the German Research Foundation (DFG).



INFORMATION:



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Opportunistic bivalves, high-flying diatoms, mirror-like faults, and petit-spot volcanism

2013-09-11
Boulder, Colo., USA – New Geology studies posted online ahead of print on 6 Sept. 2013 cover faulting and strain; mineralogy; tsunamigenic earthquakes; the formation of banded iron formations by microbial processes; stalagmites in Vanuatu; garnets; the world's largest saltpan complex and one of the world's largest inland deltas; estuaries beneath ice sheets; volcanism; erosion; mirror-like faults; the Baltic Sea dead zone; and the first real-time record of a turbidity current associated with the 2011 Mw 9.0 Tohoku-Oki tsunami. Highlights are provided below. Geology articles ...

Shingles symptoms may be caused by neuronal short circuit

2013-09-11
The pain and itching associated with shingles and herpes may be due to the virus causing a "short circuit" in the nerve cells that reach the skin, Princeton researchers have found. This short circuit appears to cause repetitive, synchronized firing of nerve cells, the researchers reported in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. This cyclical firing may be the cause of the persistent itching and pain that are symptoms of oral and genital herpes as well as shingles and chicken pox, according to the researchers. These diseases are all caused by ...

2 common drugs may help treat deadly Middle East Respiratory Syndrome

2013-09-11
Treatment with two common drugs reduced viral replication and lung damage when given to monkeys infected with the virus that causes Middle East Respiratory Syndrome. The condition is deadly pneumonia that has killed more than 100 people, primarily in the Middle East. Middle East Respiratory Syndrome, or MERS, was first reported in Saudi Arabia last year. The infection is caused by a coronavirus, called MERS-CoV, which is closely related to several coronaviruses that infect bats. About half of patients who developed the syndrome have died. Currently, there is no proven ...

Innovative 'pay for performance' program improves patient outcomes

2013-09-11
Paying doctors for how they perform specific medical procedures and examinations yields better health outcomes than the traditional “fee for service” model, where everyone gets paid a set amount regardless of quality or patient outcomes, according to new research conducted by UC San Francisco and the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. “‘Pay for performance’ programs shift the focus from basic care delivery to high quality care delivery,” said first author Naomi Bardach, MD, assistant professor in the UCSF Department of Pediatrics. “So they are ...

Alzheimer's: Newly identified protein pathology impairs RNA splicing

2013-09-11
Move over, plaques and tangles. Researchers at Emory University School of Medicine's Alzheimer's Disease Research Center have identified a previously unrecognized type of pathology in the brains of patients with Alzheimer's disease. These tangle-like structures appear at early stages of Alzheimer's and are not found in other neurodegenerative diseases such as Parkinson's disease. What makes these tangles distinct is that they sequester proteins involved in RNA splicing, the process by which instructional messages from genes are cut and pasted together. The researchers ...

Multiple sclerosis appears to originate in different part of brain than long believed

2013-09-11
The search for the cause of multiple sclerosis, a debilitating disease that affects up to a half million people in the United States, has confounded researchers and medical professionals for generations. But Steven Schutzer, a physician and scientist at Rutgers New Jersey Medical School, has now found an important clue why progress has been slow – it appears that most research on the origins of MS has focused on the wrong part of the brain. Look more to the gray matter, the new findings published in the journal PLOS ONE suggest, and less to the white. That change of approach ...

American families taking 'divergent paths,' study finds

2013-09-11
COLUMBUS, Ohio – After a period of relative calm during the 1990s, rapid changes in American families began anew during the 2000s, a new analysis suggests. Young people delayed marriage longer than ever before, permanent singlehood increased, and divorce and remarriage continued to rise during the first decade of the century. (See the top 5 trends in American families during the 2000s: http://researchnews.osu.edu/archive/5Trends.htm) But the most troubling finding, researchers say, may be how American families have taken divergent paths: White people, the educated ...

Rare, inherited mutation leaves children susceptible to acute lymphoblastic leukemia

2013-09-10
Researchers have discovered the first inherited gene mutation linked exclusively to acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) occurring in multiple relatives in individual families. The discovery of the PAX5 gene mutation was led by St. Jude Children's Research Hospital and others. The work appears in the current advance online edition of the scientific journal Nature Genetics. The mutation was identified in two unrelated families in which pediatric ALL has been diagnosed in multiple generations. The mutation involved a single change in the DNA sequence of PAX5, a gene that ...

Dingo wrongly blamed for extinctions

2013-09-10
Dingoes have been unjustly blamed for the extinctions on the Australian mainland of the Tasmanian tiger (or thylacine) and the Tasmanian devil, a University of Adelaide study has found. In a paper published in the journal Ecology, the researchers say that despite popular belief that the Australian dingo was to blame for the demise of thylacines and devils on the mainland about 3000 years ago, in fact Aboriginal populations and a shift in climate were more likely responsible. "Perhaps because the public perception of dingoes as 'sheep-killers' is so firmly entrenched, ...

Study: Minimally injured people sent to trauma centers cost hundreds of millions per year

2013-09-10
PORTLAND, Ore. — During a three-year period in seven metropolitan areas in the western United States, the emergency medical services system sent more than 85,000 injured patients to major trauma hospitals who didn't need to go there — costing the health care system more than $130 million per year, according to an Oregon Health & Science University study published today in the journal Health Affairs. The study gathered data from emergency services calls from 94 EMS agencies in the seven metropolitan areas from January 2006 through December 2008. The agencies were using ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New study from Chapman University reveals rapid return of water from ground to atmosphere through plants

World's darkest and clearest skies at risk from industrial megaproject

UC Irvine-led discovery of new skeletal tissue advances regenerative medicine potential

Pulse oximeters infrequently tested by manufacturers on diverse sets of subjects

Press Registration is open for the 2025 AAN Annual Meeting

New book connects eugenics to Big Tech

Electrifying your workout can boost muscles mass, strength, UTEP study finds

Renewed grant will continue UTIA’s integrated pest management program

Researchers find betrayal doesn’t necessarily make someone less trustworthy if we benefit

Pet dogs often overlooked as spreader of antimicrobial-resistant Salmonella

Pioneering new tool will spur advances in catalysis

Physical neglect as damaging to children’s social development as abuse

Earth scientist awarded National Medal of Science, highest honor US bestows on scientists

Research Spotlight: Lipid nanoparticle therapy developed to stop tumor growth and restore tumor suppression

Don’t write off logged tropical forests – converting to oil palm plantations has even wider effects on ecosystems

Chimpanzees are genetically adapted to local habitats and infections such as malaria

Changes to building materials could store carbon dioxide for decades

EPA finalized rule on greenhouse gas emissions by power plants could reduce emissions with limited costs

Kangaroos kept a broad diet through late Pleistocene climate changes

Sex-specific neural circuits underlie shifting social preferences for male or female interaction among mice

The basis of voluntary movements: A groundbreaking study in ‘Science’ reveals the brain mechanisms controlling natural actions

Storing carbon in buildings could help address climate change

May the force not be with you: Cell migration doesn't only rely on generating force

NTU Singapore-led discovery poised to help detect dark matter and pave the way to unravel the universe’s secrets

Researchers use lab data to rewrite equation for deformation, flow of watery glacier ice

Did prehistoric kangaroos run out of food?

HKU Engineering Professor Kaibin Huang named Fellow of the US National Academy of Inventors

HKU Faculty of Arts Professor Charles Schencking elected as Corresponding Fellow of the Australian Academy of Humanities

Rise in post-birth blood pressure in Asian, Black, and Hispanic women linked to microaggressions

Weight changes and heart failure risk after breast cancer development

[Press-News.org] NAU-led team discovers comet hiding in plain sight