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HomeScienceMini galaxy at Solar System’s edge? NASA supercomputer uncovers twisting secrets of Oort Cloud

Mini galaxy at Solar System’s edge? NASA supercomputer uncovers twisting secrets of Oort Cloud

New research suggests the Oort cloud, a shell of icy objects at the edge of our solar system, may feature spiral arms similar to the Milky Way, revealing a complex cosmic structure beyond Pluto.

February 24, 2025 / 18:16 IST
Oort Cloud May Have Spiral Arms Like a Mini Galaxy, Study Suggests. (Image: AI generated)

The vast Oort cloud, sitting at the edge of our solar system, might be more than just a shell of icy objects. New research suggests it could feature spiral arms, resembling a tiny version of the Milky Way.

A Cosmic Structure Beyond Pluto
The Oort cloud, filled with icy remnants from the solar system's formation, stretches from 2,000 to 100,000 astronomical units (AU) from the Sun. (One AU is about 93 million miles or 150 million kilometres.) These ancient fragments were pushed out by giant planets like Jupiter and Neptune billions of years ago.

Despite its scale, the Oort cloud remains a mystery. Its extreme distance makes its icy bodies too small and faint for telescopes to detect directly. Most of what we know comes from long-period comets that occasionally dive towards the Sun, disturbed by distant gravitational forces.

The Spiral Disk Discovery
To map the Oort cloud's possible structure, researchers used data from comet orbits and gravitational influences from both within and outside the solar system. Running these inputs through NASA's Pleiades supercomputer revealed a surprising shape.

The Oort cloud and its spiral arms. (Image: Nesvorný et al.) The Oort cloud and its spiral arms. (Image: Nesvorný et al.)

The model showed that the inner Oort cloud — located between 1,000 and 10,000 AU — might resemble a spiral disk. Its "arms" could stretch up to 15,000 AU from end to end, much like the spirals seen in galaxies.

This spiral shape is likely influenced by "galactic tides" — gravitational pulls from stars, black holes, and the galaxy’s centre. While these forces have little effect on objects near the Sun, they significantly shape the distant Oort cloud.

Challenges Ahead for Observation
Confirming this spiral structure won't be easy. Scientists would need to either track the icy objects directly or detect faint reflected light among countless background sources — both technically demanding tasks.

Even NASA’s Voyager 1, humanity's most distant spacecraft, won’t reach the Oort cloud for another 300 years and won’t exit it for another 300,000.

However, researchers stress that understanding the Oort cloud is vital. It holds clues about the origins of comets, the solar system’s history, and its ongoing interaction with the wider cosmos. For now, the spiral mystery remains — waiting for future explorers to uncover its secrets.

MC Science Desk Read the latest and trending science news—stay updated on NASA, ISRO, space missions, planets, asteroids, black holes, AI, quantum physics, galaxy discoveries, and more exciting breakthroughs.
first published: Feb 24, 2025 06:16 pm

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