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Pluto and Charon Kuiper Belt and Comets

Pluto and Charon Kuiper Belt and Comets. Discovery of Pluto. Pluto was discovered in 1930 by Clyde Tombaugh (1906 – 1997) Irregularities in the orbit of Uranus and Neptune lead to predictions of a 9 th planet The calculations were in error, but Tombaugh discovered Pluto anyway

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Pluto and Charon Kuiper Belt and Comets

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  1. Pluto and CharonKuiper Belt and Comets

  2. Discovery of Pluto • Pluto was discovered in 1930 by Clyde Tombaugh (1906 – 1997) • Irregularities in the orbit of Uranus and Neptune lead to predictions of a 9th planet • The calculations were in error, but Tombaugh discovered Pluto anyway • Discovery was at Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, AZ

  3. Tombaugh built his own telescope in 1926, at age 20 Sent his drawings to the professional astronomers at Lowell Observatory They hired him to search for Pluto In 1932 he went to college at the University of Kansas, received his B.S. During WWII he served in the Navy and Taught navigation After the War, Lowell didn’t have enough money to hire Tombaugh so he went to work for the military at the ballistics research labs at the White Sands Missle Range in Las Cruces, New Mexico, where he worked Until 1973.

  4. Pluto’s Moons: Charon and others • In 1978, it was discovered that Pluto has a moon, given the name Charon, after the ferryman who ferries dead souls to the underworld, where they enter the realm of Pluto, the roman god of the underworld • Pluto: diameter = 2300 km • Charon diameter = 1200 km • Pluto-Charon distance = 20,000 km, half the circumference of the Earth

  5. What is Pluto like? • Its moon Charon is nearly as large as Pluto itself (probably made by a major impact). • Pluto is very cold (40 K). • Pluto has a thin nitrogen atmosphere that will refreeze onto the surface as Pluto’s orbit takes it farther from the Sun.

  6. Hubble’s View of Pluto and Its Moons

  7. Pluto’s Orbit • Pluto will never hit Neptune, even though their orbits cross, because of their 3:2 orbital resonance. • Neptune orbits three times during the time Pluto orbits twice.

  8. Is Pluto a Planet? • Much smaller than the terrestrial or jovian planets • Not a gas giant like other outer planets • Has an icy composition like a comet • Has a very elliptical, inclined orbit • Has more in common with comets and Kuiper Belt Objectsthan with the eight major planets

  9. Other Icy Bodies • There are many icy objects like Pluto on elliptical, inclined orbits beyond Neptune. • The largest of these, Eris, was discovered in summer 2005, and is even larger than Pluto.

  10. Kuiper Belt Objects • These large, icy objects have orbits similar to the smaller objects in the Kuiper belt that become comets. • So are they very large comets or very small planets?

  11. Other Kuiper Belt Objects • Most have been discovered very recently so little is known about them. • NASA’s New Horizons mission will study Pluto and a few other Kuiper belt object in a planned flyby.

  12. Comets

  13. Comet Facts • Formed beyond the frost line, comets are icy counterparts to asteroids. • Nucleus of comet is a “dirty snowball.” • Most comets do not have tails. • Most comets remain perpetually frozen in the outer solar system. • Only comets that enter the inner solar system grow tails.

  14. Sun-Grazing Comet

  15. Nucleus of Comet • A “dirty snowball” • Source of material for comet’s tail

  16. Deep Impact • Mission to study nucleus of Comet Tempel 1 • Projectile hit surface on July 4, 2005. • Many telescopes studied aftermath of impact.

  17. Anatomy of a Comet • A coma is the atmosphere that comes from a comet’s heated nucleus. • A plasma tail is gas escaping from coma, pushed by the solar wind. • A dust tail is pushed by photons.

  18. Growth of Tail

  19. Comets eject small particles that follow the comet around in its orbit and cause meteor showers when Earth crosses the comet’s orbit.

  20. Meteors in a meteor shower appear to emanate from the same area of sky because of Earth’s motion through space.

  21. Where do comets come from?

  22. Only a tiny number of comets enter the inner solar system. Most stay far from the Sun. Oort cloud: on random orbits extending to about 50,000 AU Kuiper belt: on orderly orbits from 30–100 AU in disk of solar system

  23. How did they get there? • Kuiper belt comets formed in the Kuiper belt: flat plane, aligned with the plane of planetary orbits, orbiting in the same direction as the planets • Oort cloud comets were once closer to the Sun, but they were kicked out there by gravitational interactions with jovian planets: spherical distribution, orbits in any direction

  24. Halley’s Comet • Most comets come near the Sun once and then are destroyed • A few are “periodic” – Halley’s Comet comes by once every 75 years • Last time: 1986 • First time recorded: 240 BC • Edmund Halley (pal of Isaac Newton) described orbit in 1705 • Appeared in 1066 (omen for Battle of the Hastings)

  25. King Harold cowers after seeing Halley’s comet • Depiction in the Bayeux Tapestries, 1070s • See panorama on Wikipedia

  26. Are Pluto and Eris planets?

  27. Pluto and Eris • Pluto’s size was overestimated after its discovery in 1930, and nothing of similar size was discovered for several decades. • Now other large objects have been discovered in Kuiper belt, including Eris. • The International Astronomical Union (IAU) now classifies Pluto and Eris as dwarf planets. • Dwarf planets have not cleared most other objects from their orbital paths.

  28. What have we learned? • How big can a comet be? • The Kuiper belt from which comets come contains objects as large as Pluto. • What are the large objects of the Kuiper belt like? • Large objects in the Kuiper belt have orbits and icy compositions like those of comets. • Are Pluto and Eris planets? • While the IAU considers Pluto and Eris to be “dwarf planets,” the topic is still under debate.

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