What
do you know about comets? When I was young, I used to think that
comets hurtling through space were similar to meteors entering
earth's atmosphere; I pictured it as a fiery ball with a long tail of
flames. Comets were cool! I know now that comets are made of ice
and the long tail we see is actually ice particles being blasted away
from the body of the comet as it passes near the sun. Eh, maybe not
as cool as a fireball.
The
fact that comets lose some of their mass each time they pass near the
sun has a bearing on the age-of-the-earth debate. Obviously, if a
comet becomes smaller with each orbit of the sun, eventually it must
disappear all together. Also, each time a comet comes near the sun,
it also risks collision with a planet or the sun itself which would
end its life immediately. Simple reason, then, forces us to
acknowledge that comets can only exist so long. Their long tails are
a visual testimony of their short livedness. Eventually, they will
either exhaust all of their matter or crash into a planet. If our
solar system were really billions of years old, they should all be
gone by now. End of story.
One
very famous comet is Halley's comet which passes by our sun once
every 75 years. It is consider a “short period,” one who's orbit
takes less than 200 years. Since Halley's orbit is only 75 years, in
just one million years it would have passed by the sun more than 13K
times! No one believes that is possible and I'm not suggesting
that's what secular scientists believe. Actually, secular scientists
believe the maximum life span of Halley is about 40,000 years. If
the universe is less than 10,000 years old, this isn't a problem at
all. However, it doesn't comport well with the idea that the solar
system is millions or billions of years old. If the solar system is
really billions of years old, why are there still so many short
period comets left? In order to rescue their theory, secular science
must find a source that can replenish comets as they are exhausted.
After all, since there still are comets, and we know that most of
them can't have been circling the sun for billions of years, these
comets had to come from somewhere more recently.
One
possible source that had been suggested is the Kuiper belt, a region
of space beyond the planets known to have several, small, icy bodies
orbiting about 4½ billion miles from our sun. It has been suggested
that on occasion, these objects would collide with each other and get
knocked out of orbit, fall toward the sun, and become comets.
However, the Kuiper belt has a very round and stable orbit. Most
people consider its orbit to be too stable to be a source for short
period comets.
Overlapping
the Kuiper belt is another group of icy bodies known as the
“scattered disk.” The objects in this disk have a much more
elliptical orbit which could be described as “dynamic.” They
consider this to be a far more likely source for short period comets.
Whether
or not the Kuiper belt or the scattered disk are viable sources for
short period comets could be debated. I will grant this, though: we
can observe these regions of space. We've never seen an object
ejected from these regions and become a comet but at least we know
these regions are there.
The
point is moot though because even the secular scientists themselves
are not proposing that Halley's comet, or similar comets known as
“Halley-family comets” came from either of these sources. They
are claiming there is still another source. They've dubbed this 3rd
source, “the Oort cloud.”
According
to Wikipedia,
“The
Oort cloud,... named after Dutch astronomer Jan Oort, is a spherical
cloud of predominantly icy planetesimals believed
to surround the Sun at up to 50,000 AU”
[bold
added]. Note the use of the word, “believed.” As we read
through the entire Wiki article, we see a lot of other conditional
descriptions;
words like “conjecture,” “thought to be,” and “hypothesized”
abound. The Wiki article is brimming with “facts” about the Oort
cloud – things like it's composition, size, origin, location, etc.
It's amazing that we can know so much about something that we've
never seen and really aren't sure even exists!
From
the second paragraph of the article, we read, “Although
no
confirmed direct observations of the Oort cloud are made,
it may be the source of all long-period and Halley-type comets
entering the inner Solar System, and many of the centaurs and
Jupiter-family comets as well.”
Interesting,
huh? It sounds to me like an admission that the existence of the
Oort cloud was born solely out of the need for a source of comets. I
take that back. They're not implying any such thing. They are
admitting it outright. Also from the article, under the heading,
“Hypothesis,”
we read the following:
In
1932, the Estonian astronomer Ernst Öpik postulated that long-period
comets originated in an orbiting cloud at the outermost edge of the
Solar System. In 1950, the idea was independently revived by Oort as
a means to resolve a paradox: over the course of the Solar System's
existence, the orbits of comets are unstable; eventually, dynamics
dictate that a comet must either collide with the Sun or a planet, or
else be ejected from the Solar System by planetary perturbations.
Moreover, their volatile composition means that as they repeatedly
approach the Sun, radiation gradually boils the volatiles off until
the comet splits or develops an insulating crust that prevents
further outgassing. Thus, Oort reasoned, a comet could not have
formed while in its current orbit, and must have been held in an
outer reservoir for almost all of its existence.
You
can read it for yourselves. The Oort cloud was hypothesized
seemingly for no reason other than the need for a source of comets!
It about as scientific as saying comets are made by unicorns. We
might not see unicorns making comets but since there are comets they
had to come from somewhere, right? So the comets themselves are
scientific proof of the existence of unicorns!!
Most
people agree that science is founded upon observations. Here, we are
talking about a hypothetical source of comets that cannot be observed
so their belief is the Oort cloud is no more scientific than my
belief in God. The existence of the Oort cloud is simply
necessitated by a belief in an old universe. It's akin to a faith
belief except they see it as more plausible because it's a “natural”
explanation rather than a supernatural one.
There's
nothing within the understanding that God created the universe that
disqualifies the possibility of an enormous cloud of icy bodies
orbiting so far away that we can't see them. But it's precisely
because we can't see it that makes the entire thing seem suspect.
I'm withholding judgment until we have real evidence. Until we
actually find such a thing, the entire Oort cloud seems like nothing
more than an exotic theory.