Asteroid found in gravitational dead zone
Astronomers estimate new Neptune Trojan has diameter of about 62 miles

By Denise Chow
Space.com

August 12, 2010

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/38679415/ns/technology_and_science-space


Astronomers have discovered a new asteroid in a region of Neptune's 
orbit where no previous object was known to exist — a so-called 
gravitational "dead zone."

The asteroid, which follows Neptune's orbit around the sun, may help 
shed light on fundamental questions about planetary formation and migration.

The asteroid, classified as a Trojan, was found in a difficult-to-detect 
area near Neptune, known as the Lagrangian point L5. Lagrangian points 
are five areas in space where the gravitational tugs from two relatively 
massive bodies — such as Neptune and the sun — balance out. This allows 
smaller bodies, like asteroids, to remain stable and fixed in synch with 
the planet's orbit, as they orbit the sun.

Trojan asteroids, named after the famous war in Greek mythology that was 
waged by the ancient Greeks against the city of Troy, share a planet's 
orbit around the sun, but do not collide with it because they remain 
safely near the Lagrangian regions.

Trojan asteroids have previously been found in some of the stable points 
near Neptune and Jupiter, but this is the first discovery of a Trojan in 
Neptune's L5 region.

"We believe Neptune Trojans outnumber the Jupiter Trojans and the 
main-belt asteroids between Mars and Jupiter," Scott Sheppard of the 
Carnegie Institution in Washington, D.C., told Space.com. "If Neptune 
was where the main-belt was, we'd know thousands of these objects."

He added that thousands of Trojan asteroids are associated with Jupiter.


Stable regions

At Neptune, the L4 and L5 regions are 60 degrees along the planet's 
360-degree orbital path, ahead and behind the planet respectively. In 
this configuration, dust grains and other small bodies are able to 
collect and remain there.

Neptune Trojans are very faint because they are so far away from the 
Earth and the sun, making them difficult to detect. Astronomers Scott 
Sheppard of the Carnegie Institution in Washington, D.C., and Chad 
Trujillo of the Gemini Observatory in Hilo, Hawaii, discovered the 
Trojan asteroid, 2008 LC18, through an innovative observational strategy.

Using images from the digitized all-sky survey, the astronomers 
identified pockets of space in the stable regions where dust clouds in 
our galaxy blocked out the background starlight that crowds the galaxy's 
plane. This gave the researchers an observational window to observe 
asteroids in the foreground.

The L5 Neptune Trojan was found using the 8.2-meter Japanese Subaru 
Telescope in Hawaii. They then used the Carnegie 6.5 meter Magellan 
Telescope to observe and determine the object's orbit.

Sheppard and Trujillo had previously discovered three of the six known 
Neptune Trojans in the L4 region in the last several years. The L5 
region is much more difficult to observe.

"You're looking at the center of the Milky Way galaxy, so there are a 
lot of stars and dust clouds there" [in the background], Sheppard told 
Space.com.

The astronomers' discovery proves that at least one Trojan asteroid 
exists in the L5 region of Neptune. And while the asteroid is too faint 
to be able to determine its composition, Sheppard and Trujillo were able 
to gather other details about the mysterious object.

"We estimate that the new Neptune Trojan has a diameter of about 62 
miles (100 km), and that there are about 150 Neptune Trojans of similar 
size at L5," Sheppard said. "It matches the population estimates for the 
L4 Neptune stability regions."


A window to the past

The 2008 LC18 Trojan asteroid always trails behind Neptune and takes the 
same amount of time to circle the sun as the gas giant planet, but there 
is one key difference between the orbits of the objects, Sheppard said.

The asteroid has a highly inclined orbit, meaning for half of its orbit 
the asteroid swings north of Neptune and for the other half it sits 
south relative to the plane of the solar system. Even though it swings 
above and below this plane, the angle between the asteroid and Neptune 
relative to the sun remains at 60 degrees.

This is similar to several asteroids found in the L4 region, which 
suggests that the objects were captured into these stable regions in the 
early years of the solar system.

During this time, Neptune was moving on a different orbit than it is 
now, said Sheppard.

"This is a high-inclination object, as it would be if Neptune was on a 
much more eccentric orbit in the past," Sheppard said. "This supports 
the idea that the solar system was much more chaotic, and that giant 
planets didn't form where they are now, but migrated there."

Planets likely captured Trojan asteroids through a slow, smooth process 
of planetary migration, or, as giant planets like Neptune and Jupiter 
settled into their obits, their gravitational attraction may have 
trapped these objects in their current locations.

"In the distant past, Neptune likely migrated out several AU 
(astronomical units) and had a much more eccentric and chaotic orbit 
than it has now," Sheppard said.

The research from this study will be published in the Aug. 13 issue of 
the journal Science.

-- 
================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
Mail: antunes at uh dot edu

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