Astronomers find ring much further away from planet than is normal, leaving them wondering how it remains stable
The ring is around Quaoar, a Pluto-sized dwarf
planet orbiting beyond Neptune. Photograph: University of Sheffield / Nature
Astronomers
have spotted a ring around a Pluto-sized dwarf planet called Quaoar in the
outer reaches of the solar system.
The observations, by a powerful telescope on La Palma,
reveal the ring to be much further away from the planet than is typical,
calling into question how such systems form.
The dwarf planet, which orbits beyond Neptune, is too
distant and the ring too narrow to be seen directly. The detection was made
during a so-called occultation event, when a planet passes directly in front of
a star, meaning its sharp silhouette can be briefly observed by Earth-based
telescopes.
“Astronomers who work in this area predict these
occultations to the second, years in advance,” said Dhillon. “One of these was
predicted and we were on the observatory on La Palma.”
The observations, by the HiPERCAM telescope, showed a
sharp dip in starlight as Quaoar passed in front of the star. Intriguingly, two
smaller dips, before and after, were also observed, which the astronomers
realised indicated the presence of a ring system.
The
rings are outside the theoretical maximum. Photograph: University of
Sheffield / Nature
The
ring is located at a distance of more than seven planetary radii, twice as far
out as what was previously thought to be the maximum radius, known as the Roche
limit. Inside the Roche limit, the planet exerts strong tidal forces that
prevent debris in the ring amalgamating into a moon.
Beyond
this threshold, the local gravity of the debris plays a greater role, meaning
that denser regions of rock and ice tend to clump together, which in turn leads
to even more debris gravitating towards the clump. This snowball effect is
predicted, by current theories, to lead to the formation of a moonlet within
decades.
The
latest observations confound these theories and the team are exploring various
possibilities for how the distant ring could remain stable. One idea is that
the debris is “less sticky”, meaning that fragments in the ring are more likely
to bounce off each other during collisions.
“If they have a really frosty ice coating then you can get quite an elastic collision, like hailstones colliding rather than snowflakes,” said Dhillon. “Everyone learns about Saturn’s magnificent rings when they’re a child, so hopefully this new finding will provide further insight into how they came to be.”
The findings are published in the journal Nature.
Source: Ring discovered around dwarf planet Quaoar confounds theories | Astronomy | The Guardian
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