Hub­ble has dis­cov­ered a mys­te­ri­ous X-shaped object trav­el­ing at 11,000mph. NASA says that P/2010-A2 may be a comet, prod­uct of the col­li­sion between two aster­oids. Or a Klin­gon Bird of Prey. Either way, UCLA inves­ti­ga­tor David Jewitt is excited:

This is quite dif­fer­ent from the smooth dust envelopes of nor­mal comets. The fil­a­ments are made of dust and gravel, pre­sum­ably recently thrown out of the nucleus. Some are swept back by radi­a­tion pres­sure from sun­light to cre­ate straight dust streaks. Embed­ded in the fil­a­ments are co-moving blobs of dust that likely orig­i­nated from tiny unseen par­ent bodies.

OK, David, we will believe you until Jerry Bruck­heimer fin­ish his next movie, in which a “comet” sud­denly stops, turns to Earth, and starts fir­ing anti-matter rays against our underpants.

The weird­est thing, how­ever, is not only the pret­ty­ful X-shaped debris pat­tern, but the fact that its 460-foot-wide nucleus is out­side the dust halo and sep­a­rated from the trail. This behav­ior is some­thing which has never been seen before in a comet or any other solar-system-swooshing object.

The images—taken by Hub­ble between Jan­u­ary 25 and Jan­u­ary 29—lead NASA to believe that this is a prod­uct of the col­li­sion of two aster­oids. The nucleus would be the “sur­viv­ing rem­nant of a hyper­ve­loc­ity collision:

If this inter­pre­ta­tion is cor­rect, two small and pre­vi­ously unknown aster­oids recently col­lided, cre­at­ing a shower of debris that is being swept back into a tail from the col­li­sion site by the pres­sure of sun­light. The fil­a­men­tary appear­ance of P/2010 A2 is dif­fer­ent from any­thing seen in Hub­ble images of nor­mal comets, con­sis­tent with the action of a dif­fer­ent process.

In other words: They have no clue about what this is, and they are still spec­u­lat­ing about how this object was formed. Maybe it’s time to call Dr. Zarkov. [NASA]