1) Closest Planetary System Hosts Two Asteroid Belts  (27 October 2008)
http://www.spitzer.caltech.edu/Media/releases/ssc2008-19/release.shtml

New observations from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope indicate that 
the nearest planetary system to our own has two asteroid belts. Our 
own solar system has just one.

The star at the center of the nearby system, called Epsilon Eridani, 
is a younger, slightly cooler and fainter version of the sun. 
Previously, astronomers had uncovered evidence for two possible 
planets in the system, and for a broad, outer ring of icy comets 
similar to our own Kuiper Belt.

Now, Spitzer has discovered that the system also has dual asteroid 
belts. One sits at approximately the same position as the one in our 
solar system. The second, denser belt, most likely also populated by 
asteroids, lies between the first belt and the comet ring. The 
presence of the asteroid belts implies additional planets in the 
Epsilon Eridani system.

"This system probably looks a lot like ours did when life first took 
root on Earth," said Dana Backman, an astronomer at the SETI 
Institute, in Mountain View, Calif., and outreach director for NASA's 
Sofia mission. "The main difference we know of so far is that it has 
an additional ring of leftover planet construction material." Backman 
is lead author of a paper about the findings to appear Jan. 10 in the 
Astrophysical Journal.

Asteroid belts are rocky and metallic debris left over from the early 
stages of planet formation. Their presence around other stars signals 
that rocky planets like Earth could be orbiting in the system's inner 
regions, with massive gas planets circling near the belts' rims. In 
our own solar system, for example, there is evidence that Jupiter, 
which lies just beyond our asteroid belt, caused the asteroid belt to 
form long ago by stirring up material that would have otherwise 
coalesced into a planet. Nowadays, Jupiter helps keep our asteroid 
belt confined to a ring.

Astronomers have detected stars with signs of multiple belts of 
material before, but Epsilon Eridani is closer to Earth and more like 
our sun overall. It is 10 light-years away, slightly less massive 
than the sun, and roughly 800 million years old, or one-fifth the age 
of the sun.

Because the star is so close and similar to the sun, it is a popular 
locale in science fiction. The television series Star Trek and 
Babylon 5 referenced Epsilon Eridani, and it has been featured in 
novels by Issac Asimov and Frank Herbert, among others.

The popular star was also one of the first to be searched for signs 
of advanced alien civilizations using radio telescopes in 1960. At 
that time, astronomers did not know of the star's young age.

Spitzer observed Epsilon Eridani with both of its infrared cameras 
and its infrared spectrometer. When asteroid and comets collide or 
evaporate, they release tiny particles of dust that give off heat, 
which Spitzer can see. "Because the system is so close to us, Spitzer 
can really pick out details in the dust, giving us a good look at the 
system's architecture," said co-author Karl Stapelfeldt of NASA's Jet 
Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.

The asteroid belts detected by Spitzer orbit at distances of 
approximately 3 and 20 astronomical units from the star (an 
astronomical unit is the average distance between Earth and the sun). 
For reference, our own asteroid belt lies at about 3 astronomical 
units from the sun, and Uranus is roughly 19 astronomical units away.

One of the two possible planets previously identified around Epsilon 
Eridani, called Epsilon Eridani, was discovered in 2000. The planet 
is thought to orbit at an average distance of 3.4 astronomical units 
from the star -- just outside the innermost asteroid belt identified 
by Spitzer. This is the first time that an asteroid belt and a planet 
beyond our solar system have been found in a similar arrangement as 
our asteroid belt and Jupiter.

Some researchers had reported that Epsilon Eridani b orbits in an 
exaggerated ellipse ranging between 1 and 5 astronomical units, but 
this means the planet would cross, and quickly disrupt, the newfound 
asteroid belt. Instead, Backman and colleagues argue that this planet 
must have a more circular orbit that keeps it just outside the belt.

The other candidate planet was first proposed in 1998 to explain 
lumpiness observed in the star's outer comet ring. It is thought to 
lie near the inner edge of the ring, which orbits between 35 and 90 
astronomical units from Epsilon Eridani.

The intermediate belt detected by Spitzer suggests that a third 
planet could be responsible for creating and shepherding its 
material. This planet would orbit at approximately 20 astronomical 
units and lie between the other two planets. "Detailed studies of the 
dust belts in other planetary systems are telling us a great deal 
about their complex structure," said Michael Werner, co-author of the 
study and project scientist for Spitzer at JPL. "It seems that no two 
planetary systems are alike."

These results were presented this week at the "New Light on Young 
Stars: Spitzer's View of Circumstellar Disks" conference in Pasadena, Calif.

_______________________________________________
Spitzer-news mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
https://lists.ipac.caltech.edu/mailman/listinfo/spitzer-news


. . . ronn!  :)



_______________________________________________
http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l

Reply via email to