All posts tagged: Kuiper Belt

New simulations reveal the hidden forces shaping ‘snowman’ worlds beyond Neptune

New simulations reveal the hidden forces shaping ‘snowman’ worlds beyond Neptune

On a frigid orbit beyond Neptune, some of the solar system’s smallest worlds project a strange silhouette. Two rounded lobes, pressed together with a narrow “neck,” like a snowman that never melted. Those shapes are common enough to demand an explanation. In the Kuiper Belt, about 10 percent of planetesimals are “contact binaries,” two bodies that touch and stay touching. NASA’s New Horizons made the form famous in January 2019 when it flew past the Kuiper Belt object (486958) Arrokoth, a bilobate world with a smaller lobe called Wenu and a larger one called Weeyo. A new set of simulations led by Michigan State University graduate student Jackson Barnes argues that the snowman look can emerge from a basic process: gravitational collapse. The work is published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. A common shape needs a common origin Scientists have floated plenty of ideas for how contact binaries form, including later-life events that push two once-separated partners together. Some proposals involve gas drag, Kozai–Lidov oscillations, or combinations of effects that change a …

Astronomers discover previously unseen kernel structure inside the Kuiper Belt

Astronomers discover previously unseen kernel structure inside the Kuiper Belt

Astronomers at Princeton University have uncovered evidence that the outer solar system is more structured than long believed. Led by astrophysics doctoral student Amir Siraj, the research points to a compact, previously unseen cluster of icy bodies inside the Kuiper Belt. The finding suggests that distant solar system orbits still hold clues about how the planets moved billions of years ago. The Kuiper Belt lies beyond Neptune and contains countless frozen remnants left over from planet formation. For years, astronomers thought they had identified its main features. One of the most prominent is the “kernel,” a tight grouping of objects on calm, low-tilt orbits about 44 astronomical units from the Sun. An astronomical unit, or AU, is the average distance between Earth and the Sun. The new study shows that this familiar picture may be incomplete. Using a data-mining technique borrowed from stellar astronomy, Siraj and his colleagues found signs of a second compact structure just inside the known kernel. They call it the “inner kernel,” a group of Kuiper Belt objects clustered around 43 …