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Will Mercury Hit Earth Someday?

April 24, 2008
by Ken Croswell

Messenger's Mercury
Mercury as seen by Messenger on January 14, 2008, from about 17,000 miles away. Might this inner-solar-system body someday destroy all life on Earth? Perhaps.
NASA / JHU-APL / Carnegie Inst. of Washington
First, the bad news: the inner solar system is unstable. Given enough time, Jupiter's gravity could yank Mercury out of its present orbit.

Two new computer simulations of long-term planetary motion — one by Jacques Laskar (Paris Observatory), the other by Konstantin Batygin and Gregory Laughlin (University of California, Santa Cruz) — have both reached the same disturbing conclusion.

Says Laughlin, "The solar system isn't as stable as we'd thought." Both teams have found that Jupiter's gravity can increase Mercury's orbital eccentricity over time. Mercury's path around the Sun is already nearly as elliptical as Pluto's. But Jupiter can make Mercury's orbit so out of round that it overlaps the path of Venus. A close encounter between them could send the innermost planet careening off wildly.

"Once Mercury crosses Venus's orbit," Laughlin says, "Mercury is in serious trouble."

So is Earth.

At that point, the simulations predict Mercury will suffer generally one of four fates: it crashes into the Sun, gets ejected from the solar system, it crashes into Venus, or — worst of all — crashes into Earth.

To call this catastrophic is a gross understatement. Such an impact would kill all life on our planet. Nothing would survive. By contrast, the asteroid that doomed the dinosaurs 65 million years ago was likely just 6 miles in diameter; Mercury is 3,032 miles across. The last time an object about that size hit the Earth, the resulting debris formed our Moon.

Think we'll escape the chaos by fleeing to Mars? Think again. Even Mars might not be safe. In one of the computer simulations, the Red Planet was tossed into the cold of interstellar space.

Now, the good news: there's only about a 1% chance that Mercury will go crazy before the Sun bloats into a red giant billions of years from now. "If you're an optimist," says Laughlin, "then you say the glass is 99 percent full."

Laskar, who discovered that Mercury could go wild back in 1994, will publish his paper in Icarus; Batygin (who's still an undergraduate) and Laughlin will publish theirs in The Astrophysical Journal.


Ken Croswell is the author of a new book about the solar system, Ten Worlds: Everything That Orbits the Sun (Boyds Mills Press, 2007).

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First comments (from 23)

What?!

Posted by Melanie April 24, 2008 At 01:20 PM PDT
Okay, that's a scary thought, even if there is only a 1% chance. But if it did, how soon would it happen? There's no exact way to know, since the long-term motion is chaotic — even small effects like modest impacts or (as Laughlin told me) launching a spacecraft can affect Earth's motion enough to influence the ultimate outcome. But as this plot from Batygin and Laughlin's paper shows, Mercury doesn't "lose it" for the better part of a billion years. — Kelly Beatty


Mercury Impact

Posted by Enrico the Great April 24, 2008 At 05:28 PM PDT
A one percent chance of getting hit by Mercury AFTER the Sun becomes a Red Giant, a time long before which the oceans of Earth will have boiled away (600 Million Years from know). Even if Earth and Mercury are not reduced to vapor or at least glowing cinders. While interesting as an exercise in celestial mechanics, this is NOT keeping me up at night. Can this be nore Impact Porn??? Where is Charles Lyell when you need him!Between Creationists on one side and neo-catastrophists on the other, where can one find the beauty and wonder of Science?


Re: What?!

Posted by Dieter Kreuer April 25, 2008 At 04:01 AM PDT
Yes, that's what I also thought when I just read this in the science column of my favourite German on-line news magazine, Spiegel Online, which is usually quite accurate. IThey also had a video and created the impression, that this scenario could happen within 40 million years. I thought, this must be a hoax, so I double-checked here. In the associating Spiegel text article (http://www.spiegel.de/wissenschaft/weltall/0,1518,549271,00.html), it is stated that "scientists can only guarantee the stability of the planetary orbits for the next 40 million years" which is in sharp contrast to the plot kinldy provided by Kelly Beatty. I wonder where they (Spiegel Online) got the 40 million year figure from? Anyway, I'm not very much worried about this "threat". Hardly any species on Earth has ever survived for longer than 10 million years. Concerning the global problems that we are facing nowadays, from nuclear armament in the middle to global warming, I doubt that this 10 million year figure applies to mankind at all. We have other things to worry about than "Worlds in Collision".


Collision with Mercury

Posted by Jerry April 25, 2008 At 05:19 AM PDT
That would be the best view of a shooting star I've ever seen!


Collision with Mercury

Posted by Gerry Hosty April 25, 2008 At 05:34 AM PDT
Yeah, a great view of a shootong star; one to tell your kids about -- not!


We've survived it before, we'll do it again.

Posted by Bill April 25, 2008 At 10:49 AM PDT
"The last time an object about that size hit the Earth, the resulting debris formed our Moon." If this was the case, it appears somehow we survived that...and life came back. :D http://www.RedlineLasers.com


Re: We survived it before

Posted by Steve April 25, 2008 At 11:16 AM PDT
Well - not quite. We didn't exist the last time it happened... The moon was created very very early in the Earth's history, almost 4.5 Billion years ago according to Moon Rock dating.


planetary impact

Posted by Joel Marks April 25, 2008 At 11:43 AM PDT
Shades of Philip Wylie and Edwin Balmer 's When Worlds Collide, still a great read after all these years and now more scientifically sound than ever.


Mercury Collision?

Posted by M Carter April 25, 2008 At 12:41 PM PDT
Poor Sad Scientists! You put the figures in to the Computer, then get worried when it predicts disaster! Grow up! If you knew that much about Celestial mechanics you would give dates and times, I think NOT! Please keep your daydreams to yourself where they worry no one but your sad selves. This is Sudoscience. MC


'emminent disaster'

Posted by Tom April 25, 2008 At 03:21 PM PDT
Let's have some fun with this... 800 million years from now (+/- 200 mil) the sun will brighten a teensy bit and boil away the oceans and all life on the earth. 2 billion years from now, we will begin tidal interaction with the Andromeda Galaxy. If we though Jupiter was messing with the Solar System, wait till this exciting event comes to pass. As George Carlin once said, "the weather radar is picking up a fleet of incoming ICBM's so I wouldn't sweat the thunderstorms."




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