by Nola Taylor Redd, SPACE Contributor | January 27, 2015 - TopicsExpress



          

by Nola Taylor Redd, SPACE Contributor | January 27, 2015 02:17am ET An artists concept of the dwarf planet Eris and its moon Dysnomia. The sun is the small star in the distance.Credit: CalTech In addition to eight full-size planets, the solar system is home to a number of smaller dwarf planets. One of these, Eris, is almost the exact same size as the most well-known member of the collection, Pluto. Discovery When Eris was first discovered in 2005, it was thought to be significantly larger than Pluto. Originally, it was submitted as the tenth planet in the solar system. Ultimately, however, Eris discovery was a big reason astronomers demoted Pluto to dwarf planet status in 2006. That decision remains controversial to this day, making Eris name fitting. Eris is the Greek goddess of discord and strife, astronomer Mike Brown, a member of the discovery team, said via NASA. She stirs up jealousy and envy to cause fighting and anger among men. At the wedding of Peleus and Thetis, all the gods were invited with the exception of Eris, and, enraged at her exclusion, she spitefully caused a quarrel among the goddesses that led to the Trojan War.” Like almost all of the known dwarf planets (with the exception of Ceres), Eris lies in the Kuiper Belt that rings the outer solar system. But Eris is even farther-flung than Pluto, circling our star from about three times farther away. It takes 561 years for the distant dwarf planet to make a single trip around the sun, though it rotates once every 25 hours, making the length of its day very similar to a day on Earth. Watching Eris Eris’ distance allowed astronomers to make precise measurements when it passed in front of a dim star in 2010, an event known as an occultation. In addition to measuring its size, researchers were also able to conclude its shape, size and mass. It is extraordinary how much we can find out about a small and distant object such as Eris by watching it pass in front of a faint star, using relatively small telescopes, study lead author Bruno Sicardy, of the Pierre et Marie Curie University and Observatory of Paris, said in a statement. Five years after the creation of the new class of dwarf planets, we are finally really getting to know one of its founding members. [Meet The Solar Systems Dwarf Planets] The observations helped scientists determine that Eris diameter is 1,445 miles (2,326 kilometers), give or take 7 miles (12 km). That makes Eris size even more precisely known than Plutos. (Pluto is thought to be between 1,429 and 1,491 miles — or 2,300 to 2,400 km — across.) It also means that Pluto and Eris are, for all intents and purposes, the same size, researchers said. The researchers concluded that Eris is a spherical body. And, by studying the motion of Eris moon Dysnomia, they peg the dwarf planet to be about 27 percent heavier than Pluto, which means its considerably denser than Pluto as well. This density means that Eris is probably a large rocky body covered in a relatively thin mantle of ice, said co-author Emmanuel Jehin, of the Institut dAstrophysique de IUniversité de Liège in Belgium. Eris surface was also found to be extremely reflective, bouncing back 96 percent of the light that strikes it. That makes Eris one of the most reflective bodies in the solar system, roughly on par with Saturns icy moon Enceladus. [Top 10 Extreme Planet Facts] Researchers believe Eris surface is probably composed of a nitrogen-rich ice mixed with frozen methane in a layer less than 1 millimeter thick. This ice layer could result from the dwarf planets atmosphere condensing as frost onto its surface periodically as it moves away from the sun, they said. The observations also allow researchers to make another estimate for the surface temperature of Eris. The side of the dwarf planet facing the sun likely gets no warmer than minus 396 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 238 Celsius), while temperatures on the night side would be even lower, researchers said. Dwarf planet’s companion Eris is one of the few dwarf planets to boast a moon. Named Dysnomia, after Eris’ daughter the demon goddess of lawlessness, the moon allowed astronomers to make more accurate measures of the planet than would have been otherwise possible, such as measurements of its density. Just the facts Semi-major axis of its orbit around the sun: 6.3 billion miles (10.2 billion kilometers) Perihelion (closest approach to sun): 3.6 billion miles (5.8 billion km) Aphelion (farthest distance from sun): 9.1 billion miles (14.6 billion km) Orbital period (length of year): 561.37 Earth years Orbit eccentricity: 0.434 Orbit inclination: 46.87 Sidereal rotation period (length of day): 25.9 hours, or 1.08 Earth days Additional resources NASA Solar System Exploration: Eris Overview Jet Propulsion Laboratory: Images of Eris
Posted on: Tue, 27 Jan 2015 07:41:16 +0000

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