Space

NASA Says This Asteroid Is A First For More Than One Reason

Scientists have discovered an interstellar object entering our solar system, and its bizarre shape could yield important info.

NASA Says This Asteroid Is A First For More Than One Reason
European Southern Observatory / M. Kornmesser
SMS

For the first time, scientists have discovered an interstellar object — and its cigar-like shape is puzzling scientists. 

Nicknamed 'Oumuamua, the asteroid could be 10 times longer than it is wide. NASA notes it's never seen an asteroid like it.

Paul Chodas from NASA's Center for Near Earth Object Studies said, "This object is simply a piece of another solar system that was expelled, and it has been traveling through interstellar space hundreds of millions of years — billions of years — we don't know." 

But besides novelty, the long and thin shape could give scientists clues as to how different solar systems formed. 

Time is ticking, though. The asteroid is already on its way out of our solar system, and it's rapidly fading from our view. 

A New NASA Time Lapse Shows 20 Years Of Life On Earth
A New NASA Time Lapse Shows 20 Years Of Life On Earth

A New NASA Time Lapse Shows 20 Years Of Life On Earth

In 1997, NASA began launching satellites that could constantly record life on our planet. It's now released a video of how Earth grew in real time.

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Between orbiting and ground-based telescopes, NASA expects scientists have a little less than a month to get as much data as they can.