After years of searching,
Clyde Tombaugh discovered tiny
Pluto on
February 18th,
1930,
Little did he realize this was just one icy object in a vast belt of material known as the
Kuiper Belt.
Mike Brown explains, "The Kuiper Belt is a collection of bodies outside the orbit of
Neptune that, if nothing else had happened, if Neptune hadn't formed or if things had gone a little bit better, maybe they could have gotten together themselves and formed the next planet out beyond Neptune. But instead, in the history of the solar system, when Neptune formed it led to these objects not being able to get together, so it's just this belt of material out beyond Neptune."
After
Tombaugh's discovery, other astronomers guessed that Pluto wasn't alone and there would be more planets to discover in the outer
Solar System. But nothing turned up for decades.
Back in 1951, the
Dutch astronomer
Gerard Kuiper proposed that out beyond Neptune, material was spaced too far apart to form into a single large planet.
Instead, he predicted that there would only be a small collection of icy objects. Occasionally one of these objects would wander into the inner Solar System and become a comet.
The idea of this "Kuiper Belt" made sense to astronomers, and it helped explain why there were no large planets further out in the Solar System.
It also conveniently wrapped up another mystery of the Solar System: where do comets come from? Astronomers assumed these objects were out there, but they had no evidence of anything other than Pluto. A few icy objects were found between the orbits of
Saturn and
Uranus, but nothing out past Neptune.
After searching the region for five years, and using the latest in telescope technology, astronomers
David Jewitt and
Jane Luu finally confirmed the existence of the Kuiper Belt in
1992.
They found a tiny object, a fraction of the size of Pluto, and the techniques they used unlocked an icy land rush. Six months later, the next object was found. And many more came after that.
Fortunately for us,
Kuiper was wrong, and the belt hadn't been cleared out billions of years ago.
It's still a busy place. There have been more than a thousand objects discovered, and it's theorized that there are as many as
100,
000 objects larger than
100 km in diameter.
One part Kuiper was definitely right about is that these objects won't last forever.
Mike Brown continues, "We call it a belt, but it's a very wide belt. It's something like 45 degrees in extent across the sky - this big swath of material that's just been churned and churned by Neptune. And these days, instead of making a bigger and bigger body, they're just colliding and slowly grinding down into dust. If we come back in another hundred million years, there'll be no Kuiper Belt left."
Keeping Pluto company out in the
Kuiper belt, are many other objects worthy of mention:
Quaoar, Makemake, Haumea,
Orcus and
Eris are all large icy bodies in the
Belt. Several of them even have moons of their own. These are all tremendously far away, and yet, very much within reach.
NASA's
New Horizons spacecraft will reach this region in
2015, and capture the first ever close up pictures of a
Kuiper Belt object, images of the surface of Pluto.
Even more exciting for ancient ice-rock enthusiasts, it looks like our Solar System isn't unique. There have been icy debris belts - other Kuiper Belts - discovered around nine other star systems. There are narrow ones, like our own Solar System, and then wider belts extending much further out. Infrared surveys suggest that at many as 20% of star systems have one of their own.
Vast and unexplored, the Kuiper belt is the source of many comets, and contains ancient ice that was formed at the beginning of the Solar System.
Let's hope New Horizons is just the beginning of future decades of research into this mysterious region.
- published: 30 Dec 2013
- views: 40095