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Have interstellar meteor fragments really been found in the ocean?

Astrophysicist Avi Loeb and his team聽claim to be the first to have found fragments from an interstellar meteor, but other scientists are extremely sceptical

By Leah Crane

31 August 2023

Electron microprobe image of a spherule that may have come from an interstellar object

A microscopic image of a metal sphere that a team of scientists argue came from an interstellar object

Interstellar Expedition

Tiny metal spheres found on the seafloor may have come from an interstellar meteor. The researchers that recovered the spherules say their compositions don鈥檛 match anything ever seen before on Earth 鈥 but it鈥檚 a controversial claim.

Earlier this year, at Harvard University took a team on an expedition off the coast of Papua New Guinea, where models predicted that remnants of an object nicknamed IM1 would have landed. IM1 fell to Earth in 2014. Loeb and his colleagues later identified it as a possible interstellar object based on its recorded velocity, which they claim was fast enough to indicate that it hurtled to Earth from beyond our solar system. They hoped to locate its remains on the ocean floor.

During the expedition, the researchers found about 700 tiny iron-rich spherules. They have started analysing the compositions of those spherules. Of the 57 they鈥檝e examined so far, five seem to have unusual compositions.

These five orbs are particularly rich in the elements beryllium, lanthanum, and uranium, so the researchers have dubbed them BeLaU spherules. The spherules also have particularly low concentrations of elements that scientists would expect to evaporate in the extreme heat a meteor generates as it passes through Earth鈥檚 atmosphere, indicating that they came from space. But their compositions aren鈥檛 consistent with origins on Earth, the moon or Mars, Loeb says.

鈥淯sually when you have spherules that originated from meteors in the solar system, their abundances deviate by, at most, an order of magnitude鈥 he says. These deviate by up to a factor of 1000. 鈥淚f you combine everything that we know鈥 I鈥檓 pretty confident that these came from an interstellar object.鈥

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Loeb says these compositions indicate that the spherules probably came from a differentiated object, one that鈥檚 had enough time for the densest elements to sink to the middle. But to some other researchers, that doesn鈥檛 track. 鈥淭hese interstellar objects, we expect them to be leakage from the Oort cloud equivalents around other stars鈥 not these differentiated objects that he鈥檚 suggesting,鈥 says at the University of California, Los Angeles. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e not what you would expect from interplanetary material.鈥

Even the idea that these spherules are different from rocks we鈥檝e already found is controversial. 鈥淗e’d have to compare them to every rock type on Earth and every mineral composition, and then do the same to every mineral and rock from meteorites,鈥 says at Imperial College. 鈥淓ven if this mammoth task resulted in a lack of matches, then it still isn’t evidence for an interstellar origin, because meteorites only sample a fraction of materials in our solar system.鈥

鈥淭hese are things that have been sitting on the seafloor [for] at least nine years, but frankly probably thousands of years, reacting with seawater and collecting contamination,鈥 says at Arizona State University. 鈥淭he ocean floor is littered with all sorts of things 鈥 there are natural explanations.鈥

The nature of IM1 itself has come under fire, too. 鈥淭here鈥檚 every reason to think that these velocities, which don鈥檛 have error bars, which cannot be checked, are not correct,鈥 says Desch. 鈥淔or all of the fastest objects that seem to come from outside the solar system, there鈥檚 almost always something wonky with the velocity 鈥 this object isn鈥檛 established as interstellar at all.鈥 Plus, it鈥檚 not clear that any material would have survived the meteor鈥檚 fiery journey through Earth鈥檚 atmosphere, he says.

It will take much more evidence to convince other astronomers that the spherules are truly interstellar. But Loeb says it鈥檚 possible that more evidence will be available soon. 鈥淲e have only analysed one-tenth of the materials, but I decided to put it out now so that we could get some feedback from the community. So if there鈥檚 something we need to do differently or if we need to share some materials we can do that,鈥 he says. He and his colleagues are already planning another expedition to look for larger pieces of IM1.

Reference:

arXiv

Article amended on 1 September 2023

We have corrected the attribution for the quotes from Matthew Genge.

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