- Astronomers have found a large world of ice and rock
circling the Sun beyond the most distant planet, Pluto.
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- Preliminary observations suggest it may be up to 1,800
km across, making it the largest body other than a true planet to be discovered
orbiting the Sun.
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- Designated 2004 DW, it was found on 17 February by an
automated sky survey telescope in California.
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- Since 1992 some 800 bodies have been found in the outer
Solar System, five could be larger than 1,000 km across.
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- Large orbit
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- 2004 DW was found by California Institute of Technology
astronomers Chad Trujillo and Mike Brown, and David Rabinowitz of Yale
University, the same team that discovered Quaoar in 2002.
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- With an estimated size of somewhere between 840 - 1,800
km it may be larger that Quaoar, which is 1,000 - 1,400 across.
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- If it is at the upper end of the uncertainty range then
2004 DW is larger than any other object found circling the Sun since Pluto
was discovered in 1930 (Pluto is 2,300km across).
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- 2004 DW could even be larger than Pluto's moon, Charon
which is 1,300 across. It has an orbit that is much larger than Pluto's,
being, on average, 2.4bn km further out.
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- Astronomers believe that there are many more so-called
"Kuiper Belt Objects" awaiting discovery in the cold, dark, outer
reaches of the Solar System.
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- The Kuiper Belt (KB) is a region inhabited by small worlds
of rock and ice. It is similar in some ways to the Asteroid Belt - a region
of rocky debris between Mars and Jupiter. However, the KB contains a hundred
times more material than all the asteroids put together.
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- Not a planet
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- One thing astronomers want to stress is that 2004 DW
is not a major planet. Although it is probably slightly larger than half
the size of Pluto, there are other objects of a similar size out there
which do not, by the current definition, qualify as a planet.
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- But that is not to say that a new planet could not be
found. Experts say there could be a Pluto-sized object lurking in the darkness
awaiting discovery.
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- 2004 DW could be a type of object called a "Plutino."
Such objects have an orbit related to Pluto's path around the Sun.
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- Looking back in their archives astronomers have already
picked up the new object in images taken in 2002. They will use this observation,
and any others they may find further back, to determine its orbit more
accurately.
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- © BBC MMIV
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- http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/3506329.stm
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