Nr. 21-99 - Paris, 17 December 1999
Sunlight Keeps Star Dust at Bay
The force of sunlight is keeping part of our solar system dust
free - at least free from a particular type of dust. Markus
Landgraf, now working at ESA's operations centre ESOC in Germany
and his international team of colleagues, made this discovery
after poring over data collected by the dust detector on board
the Ulysses spacecraft. In a paper published in Science today,
they show how their findings lend support to the view that our
solar system is moving through a cloud of dust and gas that is
made of the same stuff as interstellar clouds observed elsewhere
in our galaxy.
Landgraf and colleagues made the discovery when looking at the
mass distribution of dust particles collected by the detector
between February 1992 and April 1996 as Ulysses swept along its
solar polar orbit. They were interested in interstellar dust,
which can be distinguished from dust originating in the solar
system by its speed and direction of travel. Interstellar dust
travels very fast, and can be found outside the plane of the
planets' orbits, whereas solar system dust tends to travel more
slowly in the planets' plane. "When I got the print out on my
desk, it was obvious immediately that there was something unusual
about the mass distribution. It was a big surprise," says
Landgraf. Interstellar dust grains of a particular size - not
too big and not too small - were missing from the volume of space
between two and four times the distance of the Earth from the
Sun.
After eliminating all other possible explanations, the team
concluded that the pressure of sunlight was keeping the dust
grains out of this region of space. The particles were just the
right size for sunlight to have this effect. "If the particles
are very small, light doesn't see them because they are smaller
than the wavelength of light. If they are very big, they absorb
and reflect light, but the light doesn't push them away because
they're too heavy. The particles being pushed away are large
enough to absorb and reflect light, but they don't have enough
inertia to stay still," explains Landgraf.
As grains of this particular size travel towards the Sun, they
are repelled constantly by the sunlight. This causes them to
lose speed until eventually they come to halt at a distance of
four times the Earth-Sun distance. At distances closer than
twice the Earth-Sun distance, the findings are unreliable because
interstellar and solar system dust are more difficult to tell
apart, says Landgraf.
The discovery says something about the optical properties of the
banished dust grains. So Landgraf and colleagues decided to
consult tables that list the strength of radiation pressure
needed to deflect same-sized grains of different types of
material. The best match, they found, was with a mixture of
silicates detected in interstellar clouds elsewhere in the Milky
Way, suggesting that we are moving through an identical cloud.
"We were very excited when we found that the composition fits,"
says Landgraf.
The notion that we are travelling through an interstellar cloud
is not new. First a cloud of gas was discovered moving through
the solar system. Then by 1995, Ulysses had detected enough
galactic dust grains to see that they travel through the solar
system in the same direction as the gas, suggesting that the
cloud consists of dust as well as gas.
The composition of dust grains in distant interstellar clouds can
be measured with telescopes from the way in which light is
absorbed and scattered by the clouds. But dust grains in our
local interstellar cloud are too sparse and close to us for such
measurements. Landgraf and colleagues' findings, however, show
that there are indirect ways and means of deducing their
composition.
The evidence is stacking up for our own local interstellar dust
and gas cloud. But where did the cloud come from? "We don't
know the whole history of these grains, which is why they're so
intriguing. They could have originated in supernovae explosions,
or they could be the outflow of old stars which give out star
dust when they get old, much like a candle produces soot when it
becomes too cold," speculates Landgraf.
Scientific contacts:
Dr. Markus Landgraf - Visiting Scientist
ESA - Esoc (Darmstad, Germany)
Tel: +49 6151 903627
Email: mlandgra@esoc.esa.de
Dr Richard Marsden - Ulysses Project Scientist
ESA - Estec (Noordwijk, The Netherlands)
Tel: +31 71 565 3583
Email: rmarsden@estec.esa.nl
For more information, please contact:
ESA Public Relations Division
Tel: +33 (0)1.53.69.71.55
Fax: +33 (0)1.53.69.76.90
Further information on Ulysses and the ESA science programme can
be found on the Worldwide Web at:
http://sci.esa.int