Astronomers astonished by ring around frigid distant world Quaoar
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[February 09, 2023]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The small distant world called Quaoar, named
after a god of creation in Native American mythology, is producing some
surprises for astronomers as it orbits beyond Pluto in the frigid outer
reaches of our solar system.
Researchers said on Wednesday they have detected a ring encircling
Quaoar akin to the one around the planet Saturn. But the one around
Quaoar defies the current understanding of where such rings can form -
located much further away from it than current scientific understanding
would allow.
The distance of the ring from Quaoar places it in a location where
scientists believe particles should readily come together around a
celestial body to form a moon rather than remain as separate components
in a disk of ring material.
"This is the discovery of a ring located in a place that should not be
possible," said astronomer Bruno Morgado of the Valongo Observatory and
the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro in Brazil, lead author of the
study published in the journal Nature.
Discovered in 2002, Quaoar is currently defined as a minor planet and is
proposed as a dwarf planet, though it has not yet been formally given
that status by the International Astronomical Union, the scientific body
that does such things.
Its diameter of about 700 miles (1,110 km) is about a third that of
Earth's moon and half that of the dwarf planet Pluto. It has a small
moon called Weywot, Quaoar's son in mythology, with a diameter of 105
miles (170 km) orbiting beyond the ring.
Inhabiting a distant region called the Kuiper belt populated by various
icy bodies, Quaoar orbits about 43 times further than Earth's distance
to the sun. In comparison, Neptune, the outermost planet, orbits about
30 times further than Earth's distance from the sun, and Pluto about 39
times further.
Quaoar's ring was spotted using the European Space Agency's orbiting
Cheops telescope, whose primary purpose is to study planets beyond our
solar system, as well as ground-based telescopes.
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An illustration showing the frigid
distant world Quaoar, orbiting in our solar system beyond Pluto,
surrounded by its newly discovered ring, along with its moon Weywot.
ESA, CC BY-SA 3.0 IGO/Handout via REUTERS
The ring, a clumpy disk made of ice-covered particles, is located
about 2,550 miles (4,100 km) away from Quaoar's center, with a
diameter of about 5,100 miles (8,200 km).
"Ring systems may be due to debris from the same formation process
that originated the central body or may be due to material resulting
after a collision with another body and captured by the central
body. We do not have hints at the moment on how the Quaoar ring
formed," said astronomer and study co-author Isabella Pagano,
director of Italian research institute INAF's Astrophysical
Observatory of Catania.
Unlike any other known ring around a celestial body, Quaoar's is
located outside what is called the Roche limit. That refers to the
distance from any celestial body possessing an appreciable
gravitational field within which an approaching object would be
pulled apart. Material in orbit outside the Roche limit would be
expected to assemble into a moon.
Saturn has the largest ring system in our solar system. The other
large gas planets - Jupiter, Uranus and Neptune - all have rings,
though less impressive, as do the non-planetary bodies Chariklo and
Haumea. All reside inside the Roche limit.
But how can Quaoar flout this rule?
"We considered some possible explanations: a ring made of debris,
resulting from a putative disruptive impact into a Quaoar moon,
would survive for a very short time - but the probability to observe
that is extremely low," Pagano said.
"Another possibility is that theories for the aggregation of icy
particles need to be revised, and particles might not always
aggregate into larger bodies as quickly as one might expect."
(Reporting by Will Dunham, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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