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This is so cool!

http://www.newscientistspace.com/article.ns?id=dn7751

New world found in outer solar system

29 July 2005

NewScientist.com news service

Maggie McKee


Updated: 1749 BST

Astronomical detective work led to the stunning discovery of a large new
world beyond Pluto - and hiding in plain sight. The object could be the
biggest in the Kuiper belt of rocky objects that orbit the outer reaches
of the solar system.

The first data made public about the object suggested the object could be
up to twice the size of Pluto, but newly revealed observations indicate
the object is about 70% Pluto's diameter.

The find suggests more such objects are waiting to be discovered and is
likely to reignite the fierce debate about what constitutes a planet.

On Thursday, an email with the subject, "Big TNO discovery, urgent" was
sent to a popular astronomy mailing list. The message described the
discovery of a "very bright" object that was creeping along slowly beyond
the orbit of Neptune - making it a Trans-Neptunian Object, or TNO.

If the reflectivity is as dim as most other distant, rocky objects that
have been studied, the object "would be larger than Pluto," Jose-Luis
Ortiz, an astronomer at the Sierra Nevada Observatory in Spain, wrote in
the email. Pluto is about 2300 kilometres across.


Sleepless night

Ortiz and colleagues discovered the object when they re-analysed
observations they had made in 2003. Then, they scoured older archives and
found the object in images dating back to 1955.

Based on these so-called "precoveries", they calculated the object's orbit
and sent urgent emails asking people around the globe to observe the new
find.

Amateur observers Salvador Sanchez, Reiner Stoss, and Jaime Nomen found it
on Thursday using a 30-centimetre telescope in Mallorca, Spain. "I am not
going to sleep tonight," said Stoss, a mechanical engineering student in
Darmstadt, Germany. "To find an object bigger than Pluto - it's like the X
Prize," he said, referring to the $10 million prize for private
spaceflight won in 2004.

The observations were then verified by the International Astronomical
Union's Minor Planet Center (MPC) in Cambridge, Massachusetts, US, which
designated the object 2003 EL61.

Estimates of the object's brightness posted by the MPC on Friday at 0027
GMT suggested the object could be as large as twice Pluto's diameter if it
was relatively non-reflective object. In the hours since, another team of
astronomers revealed independent data on the object taken with some of the
world's most powerful telescopes. They give the object's size at about 70%
Pluto's diameter, in line with estimates for a relatively reflective
object in the first MPC notice. They say also say the object is orbited by
a tiny moon.


Time to move

The MPC reports the object is about 51 Astronomical Units from the Sun - 1
AU is the distance between the Earth and the Sun. Its orbit brings it
comes as close to the Sun as 35 AU, while Pluto maintains an average
distance of about 39 AU. "Someone should have found this before," Brian
Marsden, director of the MPC, told New Scientist.

One reason they did not is the object's speed, suggests Stoss. Many
surveys of Near Earth Objects take a trio of images spaced 20 minutes
apart to search for telltale movement in relation to background stars.

But 2003 EL61 is too far away to detect its progress in that time. Ortiz's
survey compares images taken a day apart. "They give the object time to
move," Stoss says.

Another reason may be the plane of the object's orbit, says Tommy Grav, an
astronomer at the University of Hawaii in Manoa, US. That plane is tilted
by 28° with respect to the orbital plane of most planets, where surveys
tend to scan the skies for Near Earth Objects.


Off kilter

2003 EL61 is even more off-kilter than Pluto, which orbits in a plane
tilted by 17°. "Pluto was pushed out of the plane of the solar system when
Neptune moved outwards" soon after the solar system formed, Grav told New
Scientist. "It's possible this object has suffered something similar."

The discovery, coupled with other recent finds such as Sedna and Quaoar,
suggests other large objects may lurk in the murky region beyond Neptune.

"Some people have claimed we'd never find something as bright as this out
there," says Grav. "But there may be something even further out that's
moving so slowly we haven't seen it yet."

And the discovery is likely to revive previous fierce debates about what
constitutes a planet and even how astronomical objects are named. "But
don't even start that discussion," Stoss jokes. He says future
observations of the object's colour and brightness could reveal its true
size, shape and rotation period.



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