Image copyright ESA/Rosetta/Navcam – CC BY-SA IGO 3.0 Image caption The atmosphere around Comet 67P may force a rethink on the formation of the Solar System

The Rosetta spacecraft has discovered molecular oxygen in the cloud of gas surrounding the comet it is tracking.

The discovery has come as a complete surprise to scientists who thought that oxygen would have reacted with other elements as planets were forming.

The results indicate that current ideas about how our Solar System formed may be wrong.

The study has been published in the journal, Nature.

Researchers used Rosetta's Rosina instrument to "sniff" the atmosphere around Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, as the probe trailed the icy body over a six-month period.

Surprise gas

They found that free oxygen was the fourth most common gas around the comet, after water vapour, carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide.

One of the scientists involved, Professor Kathrin Altwegg of Bern University said that the scientists involved in the study thought the result was a mistake when they first saw the data

Image copyright ESA Image caption Oxygen was the fourth most common element found near the comet

"When we first saw it, we went a little bit into denial because it is not what you would expect to find on a comet," she said.

That is because oxygen reacts very easily with other elements to form compounds, rather than stay in its unique form. The researchers suggest that oxygen must have been frozen very quickly and became trapped in clumps of material early on in the formation of the Solar System.

"It was the most surprising discovery we have made so far (about the comet)," said Prof Altwegg. "The big question was how it got there".

Many current theories of how the planets and comets formed around the Sun suggest a violent process that would have heated up the frozen oxygen - which would then have reacted with other elements.

The suggestion is that the Solar System formation must have been an altogether quieter affair.

"If we have O2 at the beginning of the formation of the comet, how did it survive so long?" said the study's author Andre Bieler, from the University of Michigan.

"All the models say it shouldn't survive for so long, which tells us something about the building of our Solar System - it has to be very gentle to build these ice grains, it seems it is a pretty pristine material still.

"Now we have evidence that this significant part of this comet has in fact survived the formation of our Solar System."

Origins of life?

Image copyright Getty Images

In 2014, comet 67P was found to have strikingly different water to that found on Earth, adding doubt that our water came from comets

More recently, a rich array of organic molecules was found on 67P - supporting the theory that comets kick started life on Earth

BBC iWonder: Did comets kick start life on Earth?

In November last year, the Rosetta mission made history by orbiting a comet and landing a small probe on its surface. Contact with the probe was lost a few days after a crash-landing, but the orbiting spacecraft has continued to send back a wealth of data.

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