Another Star Passed Through Our Oort Cloud 70,000 Years Ago
New submitter mrthoughtful writes: According to researchers at the University of Rochester, a recently discovered dim star (Scholz's star) passed through our Oort cloud 70,000 years ago. At its closest, it was about 52,000 AU distant from Sol, or about 0.8 light-years. This is still quite a distance — Voyager 1 is about 125 AU away right now — but it's far closer than Proxima Centauri's current 266,000 AU. Still, maybe the best way to engage in interstellar travel is just to wait until the time is right.
In galactic distance, this was close and not very long ago.
I wonder how many comets it kicked out of the cloud and have cause some ruckus here on Terra.
Sure. If we want to wait tens, hundreds, thousands or millions of centuries before something comes close enough. And then we have to hope that it's something useful and habitable.
And, in the mean time, we could conveniently die out.
How about "no".
Chas - The one, the only.
THANK GOD!!!
"we are on track to exhaust our resources and die off on a withered old planet in the next 1,000 years or less"
The sun gives us an insane amount of nonstop energy. Do you not believe we will figure out how to effectively harness that in 1000 years time?
Ninjas don't carry tic tacs