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Comets’ short lifetimes and the absence of a plausible way to replenish them over billions of supposed years testify that our solar system is young, fully consistent with the Bible’s 6,000-year timescale. Comets are a reminder that since God’s Word has told us the truth about Earth’s history and the creation of the universe, we can also trust it to tell us the truth that God loves us, and if we turn from our sins and believe in the Lord Jesus Christ we have God’s gracious promise of salvation and eternal life
BY JAKE HEBERT,
PH.D.
A comet in the
night sky is an awe-inspiring sight (Figure 1).
People throughout
history have sometimes seen comets as portents of doom.
However, God warned
the people of Israel not to fear such signs in the heavens:
Thus says the LORD: “Do not learn the way of the Gentiles; do
not be dismayed at the signs of heaven, for the Gentiles are dismayed at them.”
Comets are indeed a
sign of sorts, but not in the way many ancient people thought.
Dirty Snowballs
Figure 1. Comet McNaught |
Although comets are
known for their long, beautiful tails, a tail isn’t necessary for an object to
be a comet.
Comets are defined
as solar system bodies that have at least a temporary visible atmosphere, or
coma, even if a tail isn’t present.
Comets are comparatively
small, with typical diameters of about 10 kilometers (six miles).
They are composed
of a mixture of rock, dust, and frozen ices, including water ice, and have been
described as “dirty snowballs.”
When a comet’s
trajectory brings it close to the sun, solar radiation causes the ices to
vaporize, and the escaping gases often carry dust along with them.
The released dust
and gases form a coma and usually two tails, one composed of charged gas
particles (ions) and another composed of dust.
The gas tail always
points directly away from the sun because the ionized gas particles are pushed
away from the sun by the solar radiation.
A dust tail isn’t
always present, but when it is it’s curved because the heavier dust particles
are not influenced as much by solar radiation (Figure 2).
Short Lifetimes
Because material
escapes from the comet nucleus during each approach toward the sun, the comet
eventually loses all its volatile material.
At that point, the
comet nucleus can no longer produce a coma or tail, and the comet won’t be
visible even though its rocky core may still remain. A comet nucleus usually
has enough volatile material to be continuously expelled for around 10,000
years.
Figure 2. Comet NEOWISE during this year’s appearance, with its bluish ion tail and white dust tail |
The effective
lifetimes of comets will vary depending on how often their orbits bring them
near the sun, but these lifetimes are usually measured in only tens of
thousands of years.
Secular scientists
claim that comets are leftover fragments from the formation of the solar system
4.6 billion years ago.
If comet nuclei are
billions of years old, why are thousands of comets still visible?
Creation scientists
would argue that this is because both comets and our solar system are only
about 6,000 years old.
If the solar system
really is billions of years old, then new comets must somehow replace the old
ones that die out.
Secular scientists
have suggested that comets are replenished by reservoirs of comet nuclei.
Because different
comets have different kinds of orbits, they think more than one such reservoir
is needed.
Comet Types
Comets can be
classified into two broad categories: long-period and short-period comets.
Long-period comets
are those that take more than 200 years to orbit the sun.
They have very
long, stretched-out orbits, and these orbits can be highly inclined to the
ecliptic plane — the plane of Earth’s orbit around the sun.
Creationists think
that God simply created these comets with very large orbits and that we are now
seeing many of these long-period comets for the first time.
Short-period comets
take less than 200 years to orbit the sun.
These comets can be
further subdivided into two categories: Halley-type comets (HTCs) and
Jupiter-type comets (JTCs).
HTCs are designated
as such because they have orbital characteristics similar to those of the
famous Halley’s Comet.
Their orbits are
sometimes highly inclined to the ecliptic plane.
Some HTCs are said
to have retrograde orbits because they orbit the sun “backwards” compared to
the planets.
Their orbital
periods are between 20 and 200 years.
JTCs have orbits
that generally lie between Mars and Jupiter, and it’s thought their orbits are
significantly and frequently influenced by Jupiter.
Their orbits tend
to lie near the ecliptic plane, and they have orbital periods of less than 20
years.
The Kuiper Belt
Secular astronomers
have proposed two or three different reservoirs of potential comet nuclei (Figure 3).
One of these is a
doughnut-shaped collection of bodies beyond the planet Neptune called the
Kuiper Belt.
This is older
terminology, and since these bodies orbit beyond Neptune they are often called
trans-Neptunian objects (TNOs).
I use the older
term here to clearly distinguish between this group of TNO bodies and another
collection of TNOs called the scattered disk.
Because both Kuiper
Belt objects (KBOs) and Jupiter-type comets tend to orbit near the ecliptic
plane, the Kuiper Belt is usually said to be the source for JTCs.
It’s thought that
gravitational nudges by Neptune can cause KBOs to move toward the sun, enabling
them to become visible comets.
Figure 3. Secular scientists
think the Kuiper Belt, a portion of the Kuiper Belt called the scattered disk,
and the Oort cloud serve as sources for new comet nuclei. KBO refers to a
specific Kuiper Belt Object.
However, it’s not
clear that the Kuiper Belt contains enough material to serve as an adequate
source for the JTCs.
Comet nuclei are
generally hundreds of meters to tens of kilometers in diameter, with a few that
are roughly 100 kilometers across.
But nearly all
identified KBOs are at least 100 kilometers across, with some (like Pluto and
the other dwarf planets) thousands of kilometers in diameter.
Nearly all observed
KBOs are much too large to be comet nuclei.
Secular astronomers
think collisions between larger KBOs can result in smaller objects that could
serve as comet nuclei and that these smaller objects are too small and dim to
be detected.
This may be
reasonable, but the true number of smaller KBOs is “quite uncertain.”
The Scattered Disk
What about the
Halley-type comets?
Scattered disk
objects (SDOs) are objects beyond Neptune that can have more extreme elongated
orbits with high inclinations to the plane of the solar system.
Their name is due
to the fact that their extreme orbits are thought to be the result of
“scattering” due to gravitational interactions with the giant gas planets.
Some scientists
count the SDOs as part of the Kuiper Belt, while others consider them as
distinct from it.
Because both SDOs
and HTCs can have highly inclined orbits, secular astronomers used to think
that the scattered disk was the source of HTCs.
However, they later
concluded that the scattered disk contains only about a tenth of the material
needed for it to act as a source for new HTCs.
For this reason,
some astronomers now claim that the Oort cloud is the source for new HTCs in
addition to being a source for long-period comets.
But one expert has
acknowledged that the details of how this might work are “controversial.”
The Oort Cloud
The Oort cloud is
thought to be an enormous cloud of trillions of icy comet nuclei.
It supposedly
consists of an inner disk-like cloud of comet nuclei and a much larger outer
spherical shell (Figure 3).
However, there is an obvious problem with the idea that the Oort
cloud can act as a source for new comets, one that was acknowledged even by
prominent secularists Ann Druyan and Carl Sagan: “There is not yet a shred
of direct observational evidence for its [the Oort cloud’s] existence.”
The lack of
observational evidence for the Oort cloud is the least of its problems.
Remember that
secular astronomers think comets are leftovers from the solar system’s
formation 4.6 billion years ago.
According to their
theory, the comet nuclei that eventually ended up in the Oort cloud would have
originally formed much closer to the sun.
Interactions with
the planets then supposedly caused these comet nuclei to migrate to much
greater distances from the sun to form the Oort cloud.
However, a computer
simulation showed that most of the nuclei would have been destroyed during the
migration process.
This would make the
mass of the Oort cloud much less today than scientists’ estimates.
This may be one of
the reasons experts have acknowledged that the standard Oort cloud theory is
incapable of accounting for the observed number of long-period comets.
They have proposed
that our sun formed near a cluster of other stars and that it somehow “stole”
comets from these stars.
But as in the case
of the Oort cloud itself, this idea is highly speculative.
Another problem
with the Oort theory is that it tends to overpredict the number of returning
long-period comets compared to the number of first-appearing long-period
comets.
In order to bring
the theory into alignment with observations, Jan Oort invoked an ad hoc “fading
parameter.”
However, one author said, “Still, the uncertain nature of the
fading parameter on which its [the Oort theory’s] success depends remains
disconcerting.”
Definitely Young
Scientists were shocked to discover that the dumbbell-shaped Comet Hartley 2 still contains a large amount of carbon dioxide and that this CO2 was outgassing from the comet nucleus.
Figure 4. Secular scientists were shocked to find that Comet Hartley 2 is still outgassing carbon dioxide, even though it is supposedly billions of years old. |
Its [Comet Hartley
2’s] nucleus contains an abundance of carbon dioxide (CO2—or, in
solid form, dry ice).
This is a volatile
material — it burns [turns to gas] easily — and so scientists would expect much
more of it to have burned away in the 4.5 billion years since the comet formed
along with the rest of the solar system.
A news report said
this presence of large amounts of carbon dioxide was “inexplicable.”
It’s not hard to
see why. The abundance of CO2 would require outgassing to be
ridiculously slow for billions of years, or else Comet Hartley 2’s CO2 content
was replenished somehow.
Did CO2 gas
flow from interstellar space back inside the comet nucleus? It makes sense for
CO2 to be escaping from the comet nucleus to
outer space but not for it to be flowing back in!
But if Comet Hartley 2 is just thousands of years old, the continued presence of volatile CO2 in its interior is much easier to explain.
Conclusion
Comets’ short
lifetimes and the absence of a plausible way to replenish them over billions of
supposed years testify that our solar system is young, fully consistent with
the Bible’s 6,000-year timescale.
Comets are a reminder that since God’s Word has told us the truth about Earth’s history and the creation of the universe, we can also trust it to tell us the truth that God loves us, and if we turn from our sins and believe in the Lord Jesus Christ we have God’s gracious promise of salvation and eternal life.
Dr. Hebert is
Research Associate at the Institute for Creation Research and earned his Ph.D.
in physics from the University of Texas at Dallas.
https://www.icr.org/article/comets-signs-of-youth/
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