Caltech News Release
Contact: Robert Tindol
         (626) 395-3631
         [EMAIL PROTECTED]

October 7, 2002

Caltech planetary scientists find largest object
in solar system since Pluto's 1930 discovery

BIRMINGHAM, Ala.-Planetary scientists at the California Institute of 
Technology have discovered a spherical body in the outskirts of the 
solar system.  The object circles the sun every 288 years, is half 
the size of Pluto, and is larger than all of the objects in the 
asteroid belt combined.

The object has been named "Quaoar" (pronounced KWAH-o-ar) after the 
creation force of the Tongva tribe who were the original inhabitants 
of the Los Angeles basin, where the Caltech campus is located. 
Quaoar is located about 4 billion miles from Earth in a region beyond 
the orbit of Pluto known as the Kuiper belt.  This is the region 
where comets originate and also where planetary scientists have long 
expected to eventually find larger planet-shaped objects such as 
Quaoar.  The discovery, announced at the meeting of the Division of 
Planetary Sciences of the American Astronomical Society in 
Birmingham, Alabama, today, is by far the largest object found so far 
in that search.

Currently detectable a few degrees northwest of the constellation 
Scorpio, Quaoar demonstrates beyond a doubt that large bodies can 
indeed be found in the farthest reaches of the solar system. 
Further, the discovery provides hope that additional large bodies in 
the Kuiper belt will be discovered, some as large, or even larger 
than Pluto.  Also, Quaoar and other bodies like it should provide new 
insights into the primordial materials that formed the solar system 
some 5 billion years ago.

The discovery further supports the ever-growing opinion that Pluto 
itself is a Kuiper belt object.  According to recent interpretations, 
Pluto was the first Kuiper belt object to be discovered, long before 
the age of enhanced digital techniques and charge-coupled (CCD) 
cameras, because it had been kicked into a Neptune-crossing 
elliptical orbit eons ago.

"Quaoar definitely hurts the case for Pluto being a planet," says 
Caltech planetary science associate professor Mike Brown.  "If Pluto 
were discovered today, no one would even consider calling it a planet 
because it's clearly a Kuiper belt object."

Brown and Chad Trujillo, a postdoctoral researcher,  first detected 
Quaoar on a digital sky image taken on June 4 with Palomar 
Observatory's 48-inch Oschin Telescope.  The researchers looked 
through archived images taken by a variety of instruments and soon 
found images taken in the years 1982, 1996, 2000, and 2001.  These 
images not only allowed Brown and Trujillo to establish the distance 
and orbital inclination of Quaoar, but also to determine that the 
body is revolving around the sun in a remarkably stable, circular 
orbit.

"It's probably been in this same orbit for 4 billion years," Brown says.

The discovery of Quaoar is not so much a triumph of advanced optics 
as of modern digital analysis and a deliberate search methodology. 
In fact, Quaoar  apparently was first photographed in 1982 by 
then-Caltech astronomer Charlie Kowal  in a search for the postulated 
"Planet X."  Kowal unfortunately never found the object on the 
plate-much less Planet X-but left the image for posterity.

Because the precise location of Quaoar on the old plates is highly 
predictable, the orbit is thought to be quite circular for a solar 
system body, and far more circular than that of Pluto.  In fact, 
Pluto is relatively easy to spot-at least if one knows where to look. 
Because Pluto comes so close to the sun for several years in its 
248-year eccentric orbit, the volatile substances in the atmosphere 
are periodically heated, thereby increasing the body's reflectance, 
or albedo, to such a degree that it is bright enough to be seen even 
in small amateur telescopes.

Quaoar, on the other hand, never approaches the sun in its circular 
orbit, which means that the volatile gases never are excited enough 
to kick up a highly reflective atmosphere.  As is the case for other 
bodies of similar rock-and-ice composition, Quaoar's surface has been 
bathed by faint ultraviolet radiation from the sun over the eons, and 
this radiation has slowly caused the organic materials on the body's 
surface to turn into a dark tar-like substance.

As a result, Quaoar's albedo is about 10 percent, just a bit higher 
than that of the moon.  By contrast, Pluto's albedo is 60 percent.

As for spin rate, the researchers know that Quaoar is rotating 
because of slight variations in reflectance in the six weeks they've 
observed the body.  But they're still collecting data to determine 
the precise rate.  They will also probably be able to figure out 
whether the spin axis is tilted relative to the ecliptical plane.

Inclination is about 7.9 percent, which means that the plane of 
Quaoar's orbit is tilted by 7.9 degrees from the relatively flat 
orbital plane in which all the planets except Pluto are to be found. 
Pluto's orbital inclination is about 17 degrees, which presumably 
resulted from whatever gravitational interference originally thrust 
it into an elliptical orbit.

Quaoar's orbital inclination of 7.9 degrees is not particularly 
surprising, Brown says, because the Kuiper belt is turning out to be 
wider than originally expected.  The Kuiper belt can be thought of as 
a band extending around the sky, superimposed on the path of the sun. 
Brown and Trujillo's research, in effect, is to take repeated 
exposures of a several-degree swath of this band and then use digital 
equipment to check and see if any tiny point of light has moved 
relative to the stellar background. 

Brown and Trujillo are currently using about 10 to 20 percent of the 
available time on the 48-inch Oschin Telescope, which was used to 
obtain both the Palomar Sky Survey and the more recent Palomar 
Digital Sky Survey.  The latter was completed just last year, thus 
freeing up the Oschin Telescope to be refitted by the Jet Propulsion 
Laboratory for a new mission to search for near-Earth asteroids. 
About 80 percent of the telescope time is now designated for the 
asteroid survey, leaving the remainder for scientific studies like 
Brown and Trujillo's.

Siuce the discovery, the researchers have also employed other 
telescopes to study and characterize Quaoar, including the Hubble 
Space Telescope (related news release available at link below) and 
the Keck Observatory on Mauna Kea, Hawaii.  Information derived from 
these studies will provide new insights into the precise composition 
of Quaoar and may answer questions about whether the body has a 
tenuous atmosphere.

But the good news for the serious amateur astronomer is that he or 
she doesn't necessarily need a space telescope or 10-meter reflector 
to get a faint image of Quaoar.  Armed with precise coordinates and a 
16-inch telescope fitted with a CCD camera-the kind advertised in 
magazines such as Sky and Telescope and Astronomy-an amateur should 
be able to obtain images on successive nights that will show a faint 
dot of light in slightly different positions. 

As for Brown and Trujillo, the two are continuing their search for 
other large Kuiper-belt bodies.  Some, in fact, may be even larger 
than Quaoar.

"Right now, I'd say they get as big as Pluto," says Brown.

###

Note to editors:  Additional information and images are available at 
the following Web sites:

http://www.gps.caltech.edu/~chad/quaoar

http://cauldron.stsci.edu/prweb/inprogress/secretsquirrel/

The Tongva official tribal council Web site is also well worth visiting:

http://www.tongva.com



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