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Why are there so many 'space snowmen' in our solar system? New study offers clues

Latest from Space.com·@cqchoisciwriter.usCharlesQ.Choi·2 months ago
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Breaking space news, the latest updates on rocket launches, skywatching events and more! You are now subscribed Your newsletter sign-up was successful Want to add more newsletters? In the distant reaches of the solar system are many icy objects that resemble snowmen — pairs of conjoined spheres. Now, a new study reveals the simple way in which these mysterious objects might form. Beyond the orbit of Neptune lie icy building blocks from the dawn of the solar system known as planetesimals. Much like snowballs are composed of clusters of snowflakes, planetesimals likely arose within the disks of dust that encircled the newborn sun from clouds of pebble-sized objects pulled together by their mutual gravitational attraction. In 2019, NASA's New Horizons spacecraft captured the first-ever up-close images of planetesimals shaped like two linked spheres — snowmen-like objects known as contact binaries. Other research found that one in 10 to one in four planetesimals may be contact binaries.…

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