Data from NASA’s New Horizons mission are providing new insights into
how planets and planetesimals — the building blocks of the planets — were
formed.
The New Horizons
spacecraft flew past the ancient Kuiper Belt object Arrokoth (2014 MU69) on
Jan. 1, 2019, providing humankind’s first close-up look at one of the icy
remnants of solar system formation in the vast region beyond the orbit of
Neptune. Using detailed data on the object’s shape, geology, color and
composition — gathered during a record-setting flyby that occurred more than
four billion miles from Earth — researchers have apparently answered a
longstanding question about planetesimal origins, and therefore made a major
advance in understanding how the planets themselves formed.
The team reported those findings in a set of three papers in the journal Science,
and at a media briefing Feb. 13 at the annual American Association for the
Advancement of Science meeting in Seattle.
“Arrokoth is the
most distant, most primitive and most pristine object ever explored by
spacecraft, so we knew it would have a unique story to tell,” said New Horizons
Principal Investigator Alan Stern, of the Southwest Research Institute in
Boulder, Colorado. “It’s teaching us how planetesimals formed, and we believe
the result marks a significant advance in understanding overall planetesimal
and planet formation.”
The first
post-flyby images transmitted from New Horizons last year showed that Arrokoth
had two connected lobes, a smooth surface and a uniform composition, indicating
it was likely pristine and would provide decisive information on how bodies
like it formed. These first results were published in Science last May.
“This is truly
an exciting find for what is already a very successful and history-making
mission” said Lori Glaze, director of NASA’s Planetary Science Division. “The
continued discoveries of NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft astound as it reshapes
our knowledge and understanding of how planetary bodies form in solar systems
across the universe.”
Over the
following months, working with more and higher-resolution data as well as
sophisticated computer simulations, the mission team assembled a picture of how
Arrokoth must have formed. Their analysis indicates that the lobes of this
“contact binary” object were once separate bodies that formed close together
and at low velocity, orbited each other, and then gently merged to create the
22-mile long object New Horizons observed.
This indicates
Arrokoth formed during the gravity-driven collapse of a cloud of solid
particles in the primordial solar nebula, rather than by the competing theory
of planetesimal formation called hierarchical accretion. Unlike the high-speed
collisions between planetesimals in hierarchical accretion, in particle-cloud
collapse, particles merge gently, slowly growing larger.
“Just as fossils
tell us how species evolved on Earth, planetesimals tell us how planets formed
in space,” said William McKinnon, a New Horizons co-investigator from
Washington University in St. Louis, and lead author of an Arrokoth formation
paper in Science this week. “Arrokoth looks the way it does not because it
formed through violent collisions, but in more of an intricate dance, in which
its component objects slowly orbited each other before coming together.”
Two other
important pieces of evidence support this conclusion. The uniform color and
composition of Arrokoth’s surface shows the KBO formed from nearby material, as
local cloud collapse models predict, rather than a mishmash of matter from more
separated parts of the nebula, as hierarchical models might predict.
The flattened
shapes of each of Arrokoth’s lobes, as well as the remarkably close alignment
of their poles and equators, also point to a more orderly merger from a
collapse cloud. Further still, Arrokoth’s smooth, lightly cratered surface
indicates its face has remained well preserved since the end of the planet
formation era.
“Arrokoth has
the physical features of a body that came together slowly, with ‘local’
materials in the solar nebula,” said Will Grundy, New Horizons composition
theme team lead from Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona, and the lead
author of a second Science paper. “An object like Arrokoth wouldn’t have
formed, or look the way it does, in a more chaotic accretion environment.”
The latest
Arrokoth reports significantly expand on the May 2019 Science paper, led by
Stern. The three new papers are based on 10 times as much data as the first
report, and together provide a far more complete picture of Arrokoth’s origin.
“All of the
evidence we’ve found points to particle-cloud collapse models, and all but rule
out hierarchical accretion for the formation mode of Arrokoth, and by
inference, other planetesimals,” Stern said.
New Horizons
continues to carry out new observations of additional Kuiper Belt objects it
passes in the distance. New Horizons also continues to map the charged-particle
radiation and dust environment in the Kuiper Belt. The new KBOs being observed
now are too far away to reveal discoveries like those on Arrokoth, but the team
can measure aspects such as each object’s surface properties and shape. This
summer the mission team will begin using large groundbased telescopes to search
for new KBOs to study in this way, and even for another flyby target if fuel
allows.
The New Horizons
spacecraft is now 4.4 billion miles (7.1 billion kilometers) from Earth,
operating normally and speeding deeper into the Kuiper Belt at nearly 31,300
miles (50,400 kilometers) per hour.
Journal article: https://science.sciencemag.org/content/early/2020/02/12/science.aay6620
https://science.sciencemag.org/content/early/2020/02/12/science.aay3999
https://science.sciencemag.org/content/early/2020/02/12/science.aay3705
https://science.sciencemag.org/content/early/2020/02/12/science.aay3999
https://science.sciencemag.org/content/early/2020/02/12/science.aay3705
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