Kuiper Belt Collision Found; Possible Comet Source 68
siglercm writes "Astronomers have detected the remnants of an
ancient collision in the Kuiper
Belt, the region of bodies found outside of our solar system. The massive impact
between a nearly Pluto-sized body and one half as large created a 'collisional family' of objects; this
is the first such family identified in the Kuiper Belt. The largest body produced may cross
Neptune's orbit in the distant future, but it's possible that smaller objects created by the smash-up
have already fallen into the inner solar system as comets."
Kuiper Crash (Score:5, Insightful)
Wouldn't the result resemble asteroids rather than comets?
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hee hee. Imagine how boring astronomy would be if they didn't name Uranus what they did?
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What's it called now?"
"Urectum."
Re:Kuiper Crash (Score:4, Insightful)
I was really dense in reading your post at first. I think I understand your question now, but please let me know if I've got it wrong.
This is a possible source of some (few) comets (if I understand correctly). I don't believe there's any assertion that all comets come from this collision. The main object is mostly rocky, but they say the trailing small ones are icy. It's possible that some of these smaller bodies may have been perturbed from their orbits and fallen into the inner solar system as comets.
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Is it just me? (Score:2)
How many planets could there be? (Score:1)
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If its too far out, then it is more likely to be disturbed by other stars besides the sun (current or past). In theory the orbital boundary of the sun is nearly infinite. In practice, our neighborhood stars muck up any outer orbits. For a non-geek analogy, it is sort of like having kids and living next store to Michael Jackson.
Hill sphere comes close to what you want (Score:5, Informative)
What about Pluto? (Score:5, Interesting)
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Yes, they probably are the kids of some aging rock star
outside? (Score:3, Interesting)
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Neptune stated, "If brother Pluto cannot be a planet, then I quit this [bleep] family!"
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So they found Kzanol's ship? (Score:2, Funny)
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Hell, we'd run out of cults [wikipedia.org] real fast.
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Quick... (Score:1)
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Likely source? (Score:2)
"Deado Scream"
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You're supposed to say "Uranus". What's with this new batch of 'dotters?
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They're the remnants of an ancient Imperial Outpost destroyed by an Achuultani attack...
How Many? (Score:2)
Anyone have a link to the total number of Kuipier Belt objects they've found? It hasn't past 100 yet has it?
Try 800 (Score:5, Informative)
shaped like a M&M (Score:4, Informative)
M.E.Brown [caltech.edu]
The Link has a animated model of the thing and a schematic of its structure that looks like candy..
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It spins end over end every 4 hours like a football that has been kicked...
To me that's just staggering. According to Google, Pluto's diameter is 2274km, so the circumference of a circle described by this thing spinning would be ~7144km. So to cover this in 4 hours, the radial velocity is 1786km/hour (1110mph)! Yeah, I can see why it's streched out.
Wow!
damn misreadings (Score:2)
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Ok, OffTopic but here ya go.
http://www.learner.org/resources/series58.html [learner.org] Excellent Series on Civilization mostly Western, but a good primer.
reminiscient of Velikovsky (Score:2, Insightful)
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that'd be cool.
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This is pretty different. Here, you have one Pluto-sized object which was hit by a smaller object and broke apart. Some of the debris from that collision was thrown into the inner solar system forming comets and the rest coalesced into a into a large, fast spinning object and mis
It looks like (Score:2)
Did I miss the memo? (Score:2)
Did the definition change recently? Have I been wrong about the definition the whole time?
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I think the way they're defining "the solar system" is basically the area where planets orbit--say, out to Neptune. After that, you are "outside" the solar system, even though all these objects in the kuiper belt orbit the sun.
It's sort of like the atmosphere of the Earth. After a couple of hundred miles, you're in "space" even though there's still bits of Earth's atmosphere up that high.
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Thats the line....sphere really.
Pltuo eh (Score:1)
*gasp* they are talking about a formally planet sized impact, that must be pretty formally big.
Pluto sized comet! (Score:2)
I particularly liked the comment near the bottom of the page that since this body (lengthwise the diameter of Pluto) is in an unstable zone then in about a billion years it will become a comet ploughing into the inner system ... gasp! It and its moons will be some sight ... make even Bruce Willis crap in his pants.
it's 'Grain of salt time' (Score:1)
Did they back-project a lot of orbital data and find a reasonably common intersection point/time? Ouija board? Magic 8-ball (related comic: http://wapsisquare.com/comics/20020125.jpg [wapsisquare.com])? Wikipedia?
And the "10 billion nuclear bombs" is just asinine. I'm thinking Caltech told the group "hey, you guys - time to publish something; and don't
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Well, nuclear bombs is a standard journalism unit. The best part is, it is interchangeable for power and energy without dividing by time! And space.com does tend to mix a little bit of technical with a little bit of sensational.
The quote that got me though, was this:
Umm...what? I'm missing something here. An extremely long period for a comet is
Buuuugs!! (Score:2)
Join the Mobile Infantry and save the world! Service guarantees citizenship!
Oblig... (Score:1)
Kuiper belt? (Score:1)
Given that Edgeworth made one of the earliest suggestions that a reservoir of comments could exist beyond the planets, his contribution too should be honoured by using the belt's full name.
Long live the GNU^H^H^HEdgworth-Kuiper Belt!
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