Skip to main content

Questions tagged [kuiper-belt]

Questions about the circumstellar disk orbiting in the outer Solar System, beyond the orbit of Neptune.

5 votes
1 answer
186 views

Would it be practical to map out the Kuiper Belt and Oort Cloud via Radar?

I recall reading an article where the moon, could be detected via radar and that orbiting radar satellites could map out the surface of mars, and in some cases even parts of Venus (the lattermost ...
Sidharth Ghoshal's user avatar
7 votes
1 answer
3k views

How and when will Sirius migrating towards the Sun trigger the movement of Kuiper belt objects into the solar system?

Currently the Sirius binary star system is moving towards the Sun at 5.5km/s for roughly the next 60 thousand years or so. At the end of those years it will be 7.8 light years away from the Sun and ...
Levi Pinks's user avatar
5 votes
0 answers
100 views

How do the giant planets excite the orbits of asteroids?

The giant planets, particularly Jupiter, are notorious for bringing about changes in eccentricities and inclinations of smaller bodies(asteroids and KBOs). Jupiter, in fact, throws almost all the ...
Ambica Govind's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
95 views

How do JWST and Hubble compare in detecting small bodies in the solar system that are a) white, b) black, c) Arrokoth-like, d) Voyager-like?

Assume the object is small, spherical, and illuminated only by the Sun, and has some apparent motion. The object is either: a) white - reflecting 100% perfectly diffusely (assume low temperature) b) ...
Roger Wood's user avatar
  • 1,379
0 votes
1 answer
97 views

The Kuiper Belt and Oort cloud [closed]

How come the comets and asteroids in the Kuiper belt and Oort cloud are kept in a gravitational field and they don't get pushed and pulled by the planets around them? I get why comets in the Oort ...
Anonymous RU's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
363 views

Where will the frost line be when the Sun becomes a red giant and what effect will it have on the solar system?

I understand the frost line is currently about 5.2 AU and earlier in the solar systems formation was 2.7 AU. But when the Sun becomes a red giant the frost line should move outward. I understand the ...
Brooks Nelson's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
83 views

If the hypothetical planet had a perihelion around 60 AU, would some consider it being responsible for the Kuiper cliff?

If Planet X had a perihelion around 60 AU and an aphelion in the vicinity of Sedna's aphelion (940 AU), would it be considered to be responsible for both the high eccentricities of TNO's orbits and ...
John's user avatar
  • 1,538
1 vote
0 answers
84 views

Which KBOs would one have to merge in order to have more than half the Kuiper belt's mass?

I wonder how many and which Kuiper belt objects' masses would one have to merge so that the resulting mass is more than half the Kuiper belt's mass. The total mass of the Kuiper belt is reportedly ...
John's user avatar
  • 1,538
1 vote
1 answer
99 views

Is the mass of Kuiper belt dominated by large objects?

There is a problem in my example sheet trying to teach me distributions. My result is that Kuiper belt objects are dominated by large mass objects. Is this supported by observational evidence?
zabop's user avatar
  • 481
1 vote
1 answer
193 views

Are there actual asteroids in the Oort cloud?

This answer to At what annual rate are new exoplanets being recognized? How does it compare to new asteroids? shows that the rate of new asteroid discovery is roughly two orders of magnitude higher ...
uhoh's user avatar
  • 30.7k
3 votes
1 answer
115 views

How many Kuiper Belt objects have moons? How do we know this?

On 2012 in the New Horizons' The PI's Perspective Alan Stern wrote The Kuiper Belt at 20: Paradigm Changes in Our Knowledge of the Solar System (more also archived) which includes: Most of the known ...
uhoh's user avatar
  • 30.7k
5 votes
1 answer
156 views

Why is the Kuiper belt called like this?

Since most orbits of KBOs are highly inclined, isn't it rather a "Kuiper cloud"? Most main belt objects are also more inclined than the eight recognized planets, but not as much as KBOs (and ...
Greenhorn's user avatar
  • 397
15 votes
2 answers
2k views

What caused this mysterious stellar occultation on July 10, 2017 from something ~100 km away from 486958 Arrokoth?

In 2017 a series of stellar occultations by asteroid 2014 MU69 "Ultima Thule" now officially named 486958 Arrokoth were timed in order to obtain better orbital information before the New ...
uhoh's user avatar
  • 30.7k
1 vote
1 answer
100 views

Are there any known low-inclination trans-Neptunian objects?

All the trans-Neptunian object's orbits I know are very inclined compared to those of the eight recognized planets, and Centaur's orbits are highly inclined as well. Are there any known Centaurs and/...
John's user avatar
  • 113
8 votes
1 answer
438 views

Could rocks from Earth have reached the Kuiper belt, or Neptune at least? If so, how?

This answer (currently edit 3) to How certain are we that we have not sent life to other planets/moons? begins: First of all, rocks from Earth are probably just about everywhere in the Solar System. ...
uhoh's user avatar
  • 30.7k
-10 votes
3 answers
964 views

Why isn't Eris considered a planet despite being the body of dominant mass?

The 2006 definition of a planet states that a planet is a celestial body that (a) is in orbit around the Sun (b) has sufficient mass for its self-gravity to overcome rigid body forces so that it ...
user30007's user avatar
  • 1,236
-1 votes
1 answer
201 views

If the hypothetical planet beyond the Kuiper belt exists, is it likely there are even more planets farther outside?

Since 2016 there are hints that a (probably) ice giant planet may exist far beyond the Kuiper belt. There are speculations that it may be a rogue planet captured by the Sun. But is it likely that ...
user30007's user avatar
  • 1,236
5 votes
1 answer
2k views

What does the Sun look like from Eris at its aphelion?

At its aphelion (most distant location from the Sun) the outermost-known planet Eris is about 100 times as far from the Sun as Earth. What does the Sun look like from Eris' surface? Is there still a ...
user30007's user avatar
  • 1,236
7 votes
2 answers
279 views

Strange speck of light in the picture sequence of the approach to 2014 Mu69 (Ultima Thule)

In the picture sequence which was taken by New Horizons during the approach to Ultima Thule on the 3rd of Dec there can be seen a speck of light in the lower left corner, not as bright as 2014 MU69 ...
Vroomfondel's user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
182 views

Could stellar occultations be used to survey Kuiper belt objects?

The first hint we had as to the shape of Ultima Thule was via an occultation study using an array of small telescopes. Has anyone investigated the feasibility and effectiveness of conducting a survey ...
BCS's user avatar
  • 263
7 votes
1 answer
134 views

What observations will be done during the New Horizons flyby of Ultima Thule?

On New Year's Eve 2018, the New Horizons spacecraft will fly past Ultima Thule (2014 MU69) at about a third of the distance it flew by Pluto some years ago. So it should be able to get some detailed ...
Rory Alsop's user avatar
  • 5,100
3 votes
1 answer
105 views

Are there recent estimates of Kuiper belt mass?

What is the mass of the Kuiper belt? Obviously estimates will be highly uncertain, but for my application I would like to find a decent current estimate. The papers I found so far: (Gladman et al. ...
Anders Sandberg's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
134 views

Kuiper belt planet formation

There are a lot of objects of different sizes in the Kuiper belt. Are objects in the Kuiper belt stable? Is there any chance in the future that one of the larger objects would accumulate enough ...
historynerd's user avatar
9 votes
1 answer
214 views

What is the farthest reported distance from observer from which a solar system body has occulted a star?

I originally wrote "...farthest distance from Earth..." but changed to "observer" in case the occultation was observed from a space telescope. It may not matter much but I didn't want to over-...
uhoh's user avatar
  • 30.7k
8 votes
1 answer
451 views

Is there an established distinction between a geyser and a cryovolcano in solar system bodies?

Is there an established distinction between a geyser and a cryovolcano in the context of cold solar-system bodies such as the moons of Jupiter and Saturn, or Kuiper belt objects (e.g. Pluto)? Both can ...
uhoh's user avatar
  • 30.7k
5 votes
2 answers
177 views

Which kind of strategy should we take to discover Planet 9 and other KBOs?

What are the differences between the discoveries of Sedna, 2012vp 113, and the supposed Planet 9? All need deep infrared surveys at the ecliptic plane, but P9 needs a much deeper survey?
questionhang's user avatar
  • 3,137
2 votes
1 answer
693 views

Orbital period for a 1 light year object?

How long would the orbital period be for an object the mass of the moon orbiting the sun at 1 light year in a circular orbit?
joseph.hainline's user avatar
5 votes
2 answers
318 views

Which measurements have shown that 2014 MU69 is red? (New Horizons' next target)

The recent NASA feature article New Horizons: Possible Clouds on Pluto, Next Target is Reddish MU69 is actually the smallest KBO to have its color measured – and scientists have used that data to ...
uhoh's user avatar
  • 30.7k
3 votes
1 answer
134 views

Observed data: Why so many MPECs about TNOs lately?

The Minor Planet Electronic Circulars (MPECs) for July 15 through July 18 reported an unusually high number of re-observations of known trans-Neptunian objects (TNOs). These were found in the Pan-...
Mike G's user avatar
  • 18.7k
12 votes
1 answer
237 views

How does 2015 RR245 compare to the other KBOs predicting "Planet 9"?

2015 RR245 was recently announced, in a highly eccentric orbit in the KBO. From what I understand, the so called "Planet 9" was predicted because these objects tended to be pointed in a particular ...
PearsonArtPhoto's user avatar

15 30 50 per page