Acceleration of 1I/`Oumuamua from radiolytically produced H2 in H2O ice [EPA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2303.13698


In 2017, 1I/Oumuamua was identified as the first known interstellar object in the Solar System. Although typical cometary activity tracers were not detected,Oumuamua exhibited a significant non-gravitational acceleration. To date there is no explanation that can reconcile these constraints. Due to energetic considerations, outgassing of hyper-volatile molecules is favored over heavier volatiles like H2O and CO2. However, there are are theoretical and/or observational inconsistencies with existing models invoking the sublimation of pure H2 , N2, and CO. Non-outgassing explanations require fine-tuned formation mechanisms and/or unrealistic progenitor production rates. Here we report that the acceleration of Oumuamua is due to the release of entrapped molecular hydrogen which formed through energetic processing of an H2O-rich icy body. In this model,Oumuamua began as an icy planetesimal that was irradiated at low temperatures by cosmic rays during its interstellar journey, and experienced warming during its passage through the Solar System. This explanation is supported by a large body of experimental work showing that H2 is efficiently and generically produced from H2O ice processing, and that the entrapped H2 is released over a broad range of temperatures during annealing of the amorphous water matrix. We show that this mechanism can explain many of Oumuamua's peculiar properties without fine-tuning. This provides further support thatOumuamua originated as a planetesimal relic broadly similar to Solar System comets.

Read this paper on arXiv…

J. Bergner and D. Seligman
Mon, 27 Mar 23
27/59

Comments: Author’s version; 23 pages, 3 figures