Caltech News Release
For Immediate Release
December 13, 2002

MEDIA CONTACT:       Robert Tindol
                     (626) 395-3631
                     [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Moving animations available at http://pr.caltech.edu/media/kuiper/

New Theory Accounts for Existence of Binaries in Kuiper Belt

PASADENA, Calif.--In the last few years, researchers have discovered 
more than 500 objects in the Kuiper belt, a gigantic outer ring in 
the outskirts of the solar system, beyond the orbit of Neptune.  Of 
these, seven so far have turned out to be binaries--two objects that 
orbit each other. The surprise is that these binaries all seem to be 
pairs of widely separated objects of similar size. This is surprising 
because more familiar pairings, such as the Earth/moon system, tend 
to be unequal in size and/or rather close together.

To account for these oddities, scientists from the California 
Institute of Technology have devised a theory of Kuiper belt binary 
formation. Their work is published in the December 12 issue of the 
journal Nature.

According to Re'em Sari, a senior research fellow at Caltech, the 
theory will be tested in the near future as additional observations 
of Kuiper belt objects are obtained and additional binaries are 
discovered. The other authors of the paper are Peter Goldreich, 
DuBridge Professor of Astrophysics and Planetary Physics at Caltech; 
and Yoram Lithwick, now a postdoc at UC Berkeley.

"The binaries we are more familiar with, like the Earth/moon system, 
resulted from collisions that ejected material," says Sari.  "That 
material coalesced to form the smaller body. Then the interaction 
between the spin of the larger body and the orbit of the smaller body 
caused them to move farther and farther apart."

"This doesn't work for the Kuiper belt binaries," Sari says.  "They 
are too far away from each other to have ever had enough spin for 
this effect to take place." The members of the seven binaries are 
about 100 kilometers in radius, but 10,000 to 100,000 kilometers from 
each other. Thus their separations are 100 to 1,000 times their 
radii. By contrast, Earth is about 400,000 kilometers from the moon, 
and about 6,000 kilometers in radius.  Even at a distance of 60 times 
the radius of Earth, the tidal mechanism works only because the moon 
is so much less massive than Earth.

Sari and his colleagues think the explanation is that the Kuiper belt 
bodies tend to get closer together as time goes on -- exactly the 
reverse of the situation with the planets and their satellites, where 
the separations tend to increase. "The Earth/moon system evolves 
'inside-out', but the Kuiper belt binaries evolved 'outside-in,'" 
explains Sari.

Individual objects in the Kuiper belt are thought to have formed in 
the early solar system by accretion of smaller objects. The region 
where the gravitational influence of a body dominates over the tidal 
forces of the sun is known as its Hill sphere. For a 100-kilometer 
body located in the Kuiper belt, this extends to about a million 
kilometers. Large bodies can accidentally pass through one another's 
Hill spheres. Such encounters last a couple of centuries and, if no 
additional process is involved, the "transient binary" dissolves, and 
the two objects continue on separate orbits around the sun. The 
transient binary must lose energy to become bound. The researchers 
estimate that in about 1 in 300 encounters, a third large body would 
have absorbed some of the energy and left a bound binary. An 
additional mechanism for energy loss is gravitational interaction 
with the sea of small bodies from which the large bodies were 
accreting. This interaction slows down the large bodies. Once in 
every 30 encounters, they slowed down sufficiently to become bound.

Starting with a binary of large separation a million kilometers 
apart, continued interaction with the sea of small objects would have 
led to additional loss of energy, tightening the binary. The time 
required for the formation of individual objects is sufficient for a 
binary orbit to shrink all the way to contact. Indeed, the research 
predicts that most binaries coalesced in this manner or at least 
became very tight. But if the binary system was formed relatively 
late, close to the time that accretion in the Kuiper belt ceased, a 
widely separated binary would survive. These are the objects we 
observe today. By this mechanism it can be predicted that about 5 
percent of objects remain with large enough separation to be observed 
as a binary. The prediction is in agreement with recent surveys 
conducted by Caltech associate professor of planetary astronomy Mike 
Brown. The majority of objects ended up as tighter binaries. Their 
images cannot be distinguished from those of isolated objects when 
observed from Earth using existing instruments.

These ideas will be more thoroughly tested as additional objects are 
discovered and further data is collected. Further theoretical work 
could predict how the inclination of a binary orbit, relative to the 
plane of the solar system, evolves as the orbit shrinks. If it 
increases, this would suggest that the Pluto/Charon system, although 
tight, was also formed by the 'outside-in' mechanism, since it is 
known to have large inclination.



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