Scientists discern internal structure of mysterious dwarf planet Eris
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[November 16, 2023]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Dwarf planet Eris, similar in size to its
better-known cosmic cousin Pluto, has remained an enigma since being
discovered in 2005 lurking in the solar system's far reaches. While
Pluto was explored by NASA's New Horizons spacecraft during a 2015
flyby, Eris - about 40% further from the sun - has never been visited.
But scientists are gaining a fuller understanding of Eris and its
differences with Pluto thanks to research that discerns details about
this frigid remote world's internal structure and composition based on
its orbital relationship with its moon Dysnomia.
Eris, the researchers said on Wednesday, appears to have a rocky
interior below a shell of ice. Pluto also has an icy exterior with rock
below, but possesses a higher ice content and is thought to harbor an
underground liquid ocean.
"We already knew that Eris is more rock-rich than Pluto, but what we
didn't know was whether Eris had separated the rock from the ice," said
University of California Santa Cruz planetary scientist Francis Nimmo,
lead author of the study published in the journal Science Advances.
"That means that Eris got hot enough at some point in its history to
melt, so that all the rock sank to the center. The ice is not motionless
but is experiencing a slow churning motion, driven by leftover heat from
the inside. Most likely there is no liquid ocean inside Eris," Nimmo
added.
Eris has a diameter of about 1,445 miles (2,326 km), slightly smaller
than Pluto's 1,473 miles (2,370 km). By comparison, the diameter of
Earth's moon is about 2,160 miles (3,475 km). Because of its greater
concentration of rock, which is denser than ice, Eris has about 25% more
mass than Pluto.
"As I like to think of it, take Pluto and add every single asteroid in
the asteroid belt, and you get Eris. Pluto is puffed up by ice, while
Eris is mostly rock with a little bit of ice on the outer side," said
Caltech astronomer and study co-author Mike Brown, one of the three
scientists who discovered Eris.
Named after the ancient Greek goddess of discord, Eris orbits at an
average of about 68 times further from the sun than Earth, taking 557
years to complete one orbit. Pluto orbits at an average of about 39
times Earth's distance from the sun.
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An artist's concept of the dwarf planet Eris and its moon Dysnomia
is seen in this undated illustration released by NASA. The sun is
the small star in the distance. NASA/JPL-Caltech/Handout via REUTERS
Dysnomia, named after the mythological daughter of Eris, is about
440 miles (700 km) in diameter and composed mostly of ice.
"Just like the Earth-moon system, tides on Eris slowly push Dysnomia
away and slow down the spin of Eris. This process has gone to
completion: Eris and Dysnomia always present the same face to the
other," Nimmo said.
Pluto has this same arrangement with its moon Charon, while the
Earth-moon system differs.
"The moon always presents the same face to the Earth, but the Earth
does not return the favor," Nimmo said.
Standing on Eris, it would look like dusk at midday due to its great
distance from the sun, which would appear like no more than a
particularly bright star in the sky.
"On Eris, you could block out the sun with the head of a pin," Brown
said.
Eris and Pluto reside beyond Neptune, the outermost of our solar
system's eight plants. The International Astronomical Union, which
sets definitions for planetary science, recognizes five dwarf
planets - Ceres, Haumea and Makemake, in addition to Eris and Pluto
- though dozens more may qualify. Eris is the most massive of them.
The new findings fill in some blanks about Eris.
"It helps to put Eris in the context of all of the information that
we've learned about Pluto, with its big mountains and giant impact
basin, and forces us to remember: each of the largest dwarf planets
is unique and we should be cautious about inferring too much from
what we know about Pluto," Brown said.
(Reporting by Will Dunham, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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