Planet Neptune didn’t knock out Cold Classical Kuiper Belt
October 6th, 2010 - 2:34 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Oct 6 (ANI): Challenging popular theory about how part of our solar system formed, a University of Victoria PhD student has found evidence that the planet Neptune can’t have knocked a collection of planetoids known as the Cold Classical Kuiper Belt to its current location at the edge of the solar system.
Alex Parker and his thesis supervisor Dr. J. J Kavelaars (Herzberg Institute of Astrophysics) studied binaries — systems of two objects that, like the Earth and the Moon, travel around the Sun while orbiting around each other. Binaries are extremely common in the Kuiper Belt.
“Binaries are really useful tools for astronomers. Since their orbits can be affected by their environment, we can use them to test what the interplanetary environment is like and what it was like in the past,” said Parker.
Using computer simulations, the researchers determined that many binary systems in part of the Belt would have been destroyed by the jostling they would have experienced if Neptune did indeed move the Kuiper Belt to its current location.
“These binaries with slow, wide orbits are a hallmark of the Cold Classical Kuiper Belt,” said Parker, “and they would not be there today if the members of this part of the Kuiper Belt were ever hassled by Neptune in the past.”
The finding strongly contradicts a popular theory for the origin of the Cold Classical Kuiper Belt, and instead suggests that it formed near its present location and remained undisturbed over the age of the solar system.
The Cold Classical Kuiper Belt lies in a very flat ring between 6 and 7 billion kilometers from the Sun, and contains thousands of bodies larger than 100 kilometers across, roughly one-third of which may be in binary pairs.
The Kuiper Belt is of special interest to astrophysicists because it is a fossil remnant of the primordial debris that formed the planets, says Parker.
“Understanding the structure and history of the Kuiper Belt helps us better understand how the planets in our solar system formed, and how planets around other stars may be forming today,” he added.
The research will be published in an upcoming edition of Astrophysical
Journal Letters. (ANI)
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Tags: age of the solar system, alex parker, astrophysics, binary pairs, binary systems, computer simulations, earth and the moon, herzberg institute, interplanetary environment, kuiper belt, moon travel, orbits, phd student, planet neptune, planetoids, remnant, thesis supervisor, university of victoria, useful tools, using computer