Submitted via IRC for TheMightyBuzzard
Astronomers have observed something unexpectedly vicious happening in space - for the first time, researchers saw a white dwarf star ripping apart a massive, comet-like object, and scattering its remains across its atmosphere.
The destroyed object had a very similar chemical composition to Halley's comet, but was 100,000 times more massive, leading researchers to nickname it the comet's 'big brother'. And its fate wasn't pretty.
White dwarfs are incredibly dense stars that were once similar to our Sun, but have now collapsed down into their final form - a stellar object with a mass comparable to our Sun, packed into a volume similar to Earth. This gives white dwarfs powerful tidal pull that can tear apart any objects that get too close.
And while it's not unheard of for the stars to shred rocky, asteroid-like object, this is the first time that scientists have seen it devour an object made of icy, comet-like material.
(Score: 3, Interesting) by Arik on Monday February 13 2017, @10:28PM
Beyond the semantic concern, it seems unlikely that a comet that size could actually exist. As objects scale up the effects of gravity increase, the pressure would increase, is it a dirty snowball if it has a core at such high pressure it's liquid?
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