Asteroids Smack Jupiter More Often Than Astronomers Thought

Ch3-12-Shoemaker-Levy-9-impact.jpg

[caption id="attachment_139105" align="alignnone" width="580"]

Pow: The July 1994 impact of Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 on Jupiter, captured by the Hubble Space Telescope. Credit: R. Evans/J. Trauger/H. Hammel/HST Comet Science Team/NASA.[/caption]

Are you keeping a eye on Jupiter? The King of the Planets, Jove presents a swirling upper atmosphere full of action, a worthy object of telescopic study as it heads towards another fine opposition on May 9

th

, 2018.

Now, an

interesting international study

out of the School of Engineering in Bilbao, Spain, the Astronomical Society of France, the Meath Astronomical Group in Dublin Ireland, the Astronomical Society of Australia, and the

Esteve Duran Observatory in Spain

gives us a fascinating and encouraging possibly, and another reason to keep a sharp eye on old Jove: Jupiter may just get smacked with asteroids on a more regular basis than previously thought.

The study is especially interesting, as it primarily focused in on flashes chronicled by amateur imagers and observers in recent years. In particular, researchers focused on impact events witnessed on March 17

th

2016 and May 26

th

, 2017, along with the comparison of

exogenous

(of cosmic origin) dust measured in the upper atmosphere. This allowed researchers to come up with an interesting estimate: Jupiter most likely gets hit by an asteroid 5-20 meters in diameter (for comparison, the Chelyabinsk bolide was an estimated 20 meters across) 10 to 65 times every

year

, though researchers extrapolate that a dedicated search might only nab an impact flash or scar once every 0.4 to 2.4 years or so.

Compare this impact rate

with the Earth

, which gets hit by a Chelyabinsk-sized 20-meter impactor about once every half century or so. Incidentally, we know this impact rate on Earth better than ever before, largely due to U.S. Department of Defense classified assets in space continually watching for nuclear tests and missile launches, which also pick up an occasional meteor "photobomb."

[caption id="attachment_139106" align="alignnone" width="580"]

Small asteroid impacts over the span of the Earth over a 20 year period.

NASA/Planetary Science

.[/caption]

One reason we may never have witnessed a meteor impact on Jupiter is, astronomers (both professional and amateur) never thought to look for them. The big wake-up call was the impact of Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 in July 1994, an event witnessed by the newly refurbished Hubble Space Telescope as the resulting impact scars were easily visible in backyard telescopes for weeks afterward. Back in the day, speculation was rampant in the days leading up to the impact: would the collision be visible at all? Or would gigantic Jupiter simply gobble up the tiny comet fragments with nary a belch?

Australian amateur astronomer

Anthony Wesley also caught

an interesting impact (scar?) in 2009, and every few years or so, we get word of an elusive flash reported on the Jovian cloudtops, sometimes corroborated by a secondary independent observation or a resulting impact scar, and sometimes not.

[caption id="attachment_139107" align="alignnone" width="500"]

An impact scar (top center on the disk) on Jupiter, captured on July 19th, 2009. Image credit:

Anthony Wesley

.[/caption]

Of course, there are factors which will lower said ideal versus the actual observed impact rate. There's always a month or so a year, for example, when Jupiter is near solar conjunction on the far side of the Sun, and out of range for observation. Also, we only see half of the Jovian disk from our Earthly perspective at any given time, and we're about to lose our only set of eyes in orbit around Jupiter – NASA's

Juno spacecraft

– later this summer, unless there's a last minute mission extension.

On the plus side, however, Jupiter is a fast rotator, spinning on its axis once every 9.9 hours. This also means that near opposition, you can also track Jupiter through one full rotation in a single evening.

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Finding Jupiter: looking eastward tonight at around 11PM local. Credit Stellarium.[/caption]

Then there's the planet's location in the sky: Currently, Jupiter's crossing the southern constellation of Libra, and opposition for Jove moves about one astronomical constellation eastward along the ecliptic a year. Jupiter will bottom out along the ecliptic in late 2019, and won't pop back up north of the celestial equator until May 2022. And while it's not impossible for northern observers to keep tabs on Jupiter when it's down south, we certainly get more gaps in coverage around this time.

[caption id="attachment_139109" align="alignnone" width="580"]

Hale-Bopp's close inbound passage near Jupiter in 1996. Credit: NASA/JPL-Horizons.[/caption]

Should we hail Jove as a protective 'cosmic goal-tender,' or fear it as the bringer of death and destruction? There are theories that Jupiter may be both: for example, Jupiter altered the inbound path of Comet Hale-Bopp in 1997,

shortening its orbital period

from 4,200 to 2,533 years. The

2000 book Rare Earth

even included the hypothesis of Jupiter as a cosmic debris sweeper as one of the factors for why life evolved on Earth... if this is true, it's an imperfect one, as Earth does indeed still get hit as well.

All reasons to keep an eye on Jupiter in the 2018 opposition season.

-See something strange? The

ALPO Jupiter observers section

wants to know!

David Dickinson

David Dickinson

David Dickinson is a freelance science writer and long-time sky watcher. He has built telescopes and observatories, chased eclipses, and travels and observes with his wife, Myscha, on a mission to get ‘eyes on the sky’ worldwide. His books The Universe Today Ultimate Guide to Observing the Cosmos, The Astronomer’s Deep-Sky Field Guide and science fiction short stories are available here.