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Scientists
find planetoid Planetary
scientists at Caltech and Yale University recently discovered a new planetoid
in the outer fringes of the solar system. The planetoid, currently known
only as 2004 DW, could be even larger than Quaoar—the current record
holder in the area known as the Kuiper Belt—and is some 4.4 billion
miles from Earth. According
to the discoverers, Caltech associate professor of planetary astronomy
Mike Brown and his colleagues Chad Trujillo (now at the Gemini North observatory
in Hawaii) and David Rabinowitz of Yale University, the planetoid was
found as part of the same search program that discovered Quaoar in late
2002. The astronomers
use the 48-inch Samuel Oschin Telescope at Palomar Observatory and the
recently installed QUEST CCD camera built by a consortium including Yale
and the University Unlike Quaoar,
the new planetoid hasn’t yet been pinpointed on old photographic
plates or other images and hasn’t yet been given an official name. “So
far we only have a one-day orbit,” said Brown, explaining that the
data covers only a tiny fraction of the orbit the object follows in its
more than 300-year trip around the sun. “From that we know only
how far away it is and
how its orbit is tilted relative to the planets.” The tilt
that Brown has measured is an astonishingly large 20 degrees, larger even
than that of Pluto, which has an orbital inclination of 17 degrees and
is an anomaly among the otherwise planar planets. The size
of 2004 DW is not yet certain; Brown estimates a size of about 1,400 kilometers,
based on a comparison of the planetoid’s luminosity with that of
Quaoar. Because the distance of the object can already be calculated,
its luminosity should be a good indicator of its size relative to Quaoar,
provided the two objects have the same albedo, or reflectivity. Quaoar is
known to have an albedo of about 10 percent, which is slightly higher
than the reflectivity of our own moon. Thus, if the new object is similar,
the 1,400-kilometer estimate should hold. If its albedo is lower, then
the object could actually be somewhat larger; if higher, smaller. According
to Brown, scientists know little about the albedos of objects this large
and this far away, so the true size is quite uncertain. Researchers could
best make size measurements with the Hubble Space Telescope or the newer
Spitzer Space Telescope. The continued
discovery of massive planetoids on the outer fringe of the solar system
is further evidence that objects even farther away and larger are lurking
out there. “It’s now only a matter of time before something
is going to be discovered out there that will change our entire view of
the outer solar system,” Brown says. The team
is working hard to uncover new information about the planetoid, which
they will release as it becomes available, Brown adds. Other telescopes
will also be used to better characterize the planetoid’s features.
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