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Results tagged “pluto” from Breaking Orbit

Pluto Rocks

Posted on March 26, 2009 | 0 Comments

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Being sick is a real drag, especially when it leaves you too physically and mentally weak to do much more than lie on the couch and wonder whether it's possible to create a playlist of good songs with planets for titles.

Sometime during my fevered haze I started playing around on the ol' laptop searching for any tunes other than Holst's The Planets that drew inspiration from the solar system.

Now, I know Pluto's no longer a planet. But who could resist this:

Best. Planet puppet. Ever. Thank you, Clare and the Reasons, for giving the world's favorite dwarf planet such a delightfully trippy lullaby.

I've got a voyage to the Big Island coming up, so I think my next search will be for a song about Haumea...

Don't feel too bad for poor demoted Pluto—it and its fellow dwarf planets in the Kuiper belt seem to have found a mysterious cosmic Snow White to help clean house.

A relatively recent project called the Taiwan-America Occultation Survey (TAOS) announced today that after about two years staring at the right parts of the sky, it didn't see a single object in the Kuiper belt between 2 miles (3 kilometers) and 17 miles (28 kilometers) wide.

Normally you wouldn't think a survey that found nothing is Big News. But it is kind of a big deal to astronomers, because they were expecting to see loads of icy litter in this region of the solar system.

The Kuiper belt, after all, is a swath of stuff extending from Neptune's orbit to about 4.6 billion miles (7.5 billion kilometers) away from the sun. It contains plenty of large planet-like objects, including three of the five official dwarf planets.

new-horizons.jpg

The presence of so many big things makes people think there should be lots of little things, as bodies must be jostling around up there, breaking off smaller chunks or joining up to make larger ones.

The problem is getting a good look at them, as tiny things at that distance aren't easy to spot—in the last few years we've found objects in the Kuiper belt we hadn't noticed before that are big enough to dub dwarf planets!

An artist's impression of the New Horizons spacecraft looking back toward the sun from the Kuiper belt
—Image courtesy NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute (JHUAPL/SwRI)

In comes a technique called occultation: looking at distant stars and waiting to see if objects that pass between us and them make the stars dim momentarily.

Tying together observation resources from Taiwan, the U.S., and Korea, TAOS got busy looking for stellar flickerings that lasted a second or less. After collecting 200 hours' worth of data, not a thing in the targeted size range showed up.

Fellow space blogger Phil Plait notes on Bad Astronomy that we can't yet tell why the Kuiper belt is less crowded than we thought.

He also tosses out the tantalizing theory that there could be an even larger planet waaaaay out in the distant solar system that might be having some effect on the small stuff, but admits there's simply no evidence to support that idea.

Most likely we won't have a good picture of what's out there until we, well, go out there and take some pictures. Maybe the New Horizons mission can help clear some of this up when it gets to Pluto in 2015?

About This Blog

The moon
From dwarf planets to hot Jupiters, join NatGeo News space and tech editor Victoria Jaggard in a global discussion about all things extraterrestrial.


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