New partners: Hubble finds more moons around Pluto.Already deemed the oddball among planets, Pluto Pluto, in astronomyPluto, in astronomy, a dwarf planet and the first Kuiper belt, or transneptunian, object (see comet) to be discovered (1930) by astronomers. Pluto has an elliptical orbit usually lying beyond that of Neptune. Although Pluto was long regarded as a planet, since the discovery (beginning in 1992) of other Kuiper belt objects, including one with a diameter larger than that of Pluto, astronomers have recognized the need to reclassify Pluto, just got a new wrinkle. Two, actually. This week, astronomers announced that the Hubble Space Telescope has spied a pair of previously unrecognized moons orbiting Pluto, giving this outer solar system body a total of three satellites. If the finding is confirmed, Pluto will be the only object beyond Neptune known to have more than one moon. About 20 percent of the objects in the Kuiper belt Kuiper belt: see comet; Kuiper, Gerard Peter., a reservoir of cometlike objects even farther from the sun than Pluto is, have single partners.Researchers "will have to take these new moons into account when modeling the formation of the Pluto system," says Alan Stern of the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colo. He and Hal Weaver of the John Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Md., reported the findings during a NASA press briefing. "If real, these two new satellites of Pluto point in the direction of the richness of small, icy bodies on the edge of the solar system, bodies that we are just now being able to detect," comments Alan Boss of the Carnegie Institution of Washington (D.C.). Hubble found the two tiny satellites last May 15 and May 18 during a search for Pluto moons. The researchers caution that more Hubble observations, scheduled for February, are required before they can be certain that the bodies are orbiting Pluto. However, the scientists already have some corroborating evidence corroborating evidence n. evidence which strengthens, adds to, or confirms already existing evidence.. Last week, team members identified the two objects in Hubble images taken 3 years ago. The objects show up in about the positions that would be expected if they were orbiting Pluto. One of the moons, provisionally named S/2005 P1 P1 - MHS X.419 Message Transfer Protocol P1 - PalmOne P1 - Pentium One (Intel CPU) P1 - Phase One (superbike team) P1 - Player 1 (video games) P1 - Pokémon #1 P1 - Politics1 (website) P1 - Proposition One (grassroots nuclear disarmament organization), lies about 48,000 kilometers from Pluto and has an estimated diameter of 56 km. The other newly discovered moon, dubbed S/2005 P2 P2 - Pentium II (Intel) P2 - Phase II P2 - Pioneer 2 (Phantasy Star game) P2 - Player 2 (video games) P2 - PMBP Automated Information System (Army Corps of Engineers) P2 - Pollution Prevention P2 - Postal 2 (game) P2 - Power Projection P2 - Progressive Professionalism (US Air Force) P2 - Propaganda Due (Italian) P2 - Pulmonic Second Heart Sound P2 - Sony Playstation 2, lies about 64,000 km from Pluto and has a diameter of about 48 km. By comparison, Charon Charon, in astronomyCharon, in astronomy, the natural satellite, or moon, of Pluto.Charon, in mythologyCharon, in Greek mythology: see Hades., Pluto's previously known moon, is 19,600 km from the planet and has a diameter of 1,270 km, about half that of Pluto.Initial estimates indicate that for every 12 times that Charon circles Pluto, S/2005 P1 goes around 3 times and S/2005 P2 goes around twice. That orbital relationship suggests that the two moons didn't start out as debris that Pluto captured but instead arose from the same violent collision that formed Charon. As theorist Robin Canup of the Southwest Research Institute describes it, a massive object walloped Pluto soon after its birth some 4.5 billion years ago. Debris from the collision coalesced into Charon, with a bit left over to make the newfound moons. As interactions with Pluto pushed Charon's orbit outward, that moon's gravity forced the orbits of the two outer moons to synchronize with it. "We see [the Hubble findings] as a whole new chapter in the Pluto story and the Kuiper belt story" says Stern. |
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