New observations from NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft hint that the Kuiper Belt – the vast, distant outer zone of our solar system populated by hundreds of thousands of icy, rocky planetary building blocks – might stretch much farther out than we thought.
Artist’s concept of a collision between two objects in the distant Kuiper Belt. Such collisions are a major source of dust in the belt, along with particles kicked up from Kuiper Belt objects being peppered by microscopic dust impactors from outside of the solar system. Credit: Dan Durda, FIAAA
Speeding through the outer edges of the Kuiper Belt, almost 60 times
farther from the Sun than Earth, the New Horizons Venetia Burney Student Dust Counter (SDC) instrument is detecting higher than
expected levels of dust – the tiny frozen remnants of collisions between larger
Kuiper Belt objects (KBOs) and particles kicked up from KBOs being peppered by
microscopic dust impactors from outside of the solar system.
The readings defy scientific models
that the KBO population and density of dust should start to decline a billion
miles inside that distance and contribute to a growing body of evidence that
suggests the outer edge of the main Kuiper Belt could extend billions of miles
farther than current estimates – or that there could even be a second belt
beyond the one we already know.
The results appear in the Feb. 1
issue of the Astrophysical Journal Letters.
“New Horizons is making the first
direct measurements of interplanetary dust far beyond Neptune and Pluto, so
every observation could lead to a discovery,” said Alex Doner, lead author of
the paper and a physics graduate student at the University of Colorado Boulder
who serves as SDC lead. “The idea that we might have detected an extended
Kuiper Belt — with a whole new population of objects colliding and producing
more dust – offers another clue in solving the mysteries of the solar system’s
most distant regions.”
Designed and built by students at
the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP) at the University of
Colorado Boulder under the guidance of professional engineers, SDC has detected
microscopic dust grains produced by collisions among asteroids, comets and
Kuiper Belt objects all along New Horizons’ 5-billion-mile, 18-year journey
across our solar system – which after launch in 2006 included historic flybys
of Pluto in 2015 and the KBO Arrokoth in 2019. The first science instrument on a NASA planetary mission to
be designed, built and “flown” by students, the SDC counts and measures the
sizes of dust particles, producing information on the collision rates of such
bodies in the outer solar system.
The latest, surprising results were
compiled over three years as New Horizons traveled from 45 to 55 astronomical
units (AU) from the Sun – with one AU being the distance between Earth and Sun,
about 93 million miles or 140 million kilometers.
These readings come as New Horizons
scientists, using observatories like the Japanese Subaru Telescope in Hawaii,
have also discovered a number KBOs far beyond the traditional outer edge of the
Kuiper Belt. This outer edge (where the density of objects starts to decline)
was thought to be at about 50 AU, but new evidence suggests the belt may extend
to 80 AU, or farther.
As telescope observations continue,
Doner said, scientists are looking at other possible reasons for the high SDC
dust readings. One possibility, perhaps less likely, is radiation pressure and
other factors pushing dust created in the inner Kuiper Belt out past 50 AU. New
Horizons could also have encountered shorter-lived ice particles that cannot
reach the inner parts of the solar system and were not yet accounted for in the
current models of the Kuiper Belt.
“These new scientific results from
New Horizons may be the first time that any spacecraft has discovered a new
population of bodies in our solar system,” said Alan Stern, New Horizons
principal investigator from the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder. “I
can’t wait to see how much farther out these elevated Kuiper Belt dust levels
go.”
Now into its second extended
mission, New Horizons is expected to have sufficient propellant and power to
operate through the 2040s, at distances beyond 100 AU from the Sun. That far
out, mission scientists say, the SDC could potentially even record the spacecraft’s
transition into a region where interstellar particles dominate the dust
environment. With complementary telescopic observations of the Kuiper Belt from
Earth, New Horizons, as the only spacecraft operating in and collecting new
information about the Kuiper Belt, has a unique opportunity to learn more about
KBOs, dust sources and expanse of the belt, and interstellar dust and the dust
disks around other stars.
The Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in Laurel, Maryland, built and operates the New Horizons spacecraft and manages the mission for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate. Southwest Research Institute, based in San Antonio and Boulder, Colorado, directs the mission via Principal Investigator Alan Stern and leads the science team, payload operations and encounter science planning. New Horizons is part of NASA’s New Frontiers program, managed by NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama.
Source: NASA’s New Horizons Detects Dusty Hints of Extended Kuiper Belt - NASA
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