Building Sedna

sedna
An artist’s conception of Sedna, a dwarf planet in the Kuiper Belt. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

Remember a year or so back when the largest Kuiper Belt Object to date, named Sedna, was discovered? It shifted planetary scientists’ attention to the origin and evolution (and existence!) of large, planetoid-sized objects out beyond Pluto. They’ve been working out the fine details of Sedna’s orbit for a while now, using sophisticated models of the early solar system formation. One of the outcomes of this work is the idea that this nearly-Pluto-sized “worldlet” actually formed in place in the frigid deep-freeze of the outermost solar system. Originally scientists thought it was assembled farther in toward the Sun during the early days of the system’s formation, and was somehow ejected out to its current position.
Why does where Sedna formed matter? Astronomers have longed assumed that planetary formation took place in a rather smaller region of the original solar nebula. If Sedna was created from the collisions of smaller bodies out in the “sticks” of the solar system, then the planetary factory is bigger than everybody suspected. It also means that the Kuiper Belt, which hosts countless bodies at what used to be called “the edge of the solar system” is really part of a larger region called the Kuiper disk and played a much more prominent role in the formation of planets and moons.
The modeling that led to these conclusions was done at the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado. In the press release they sent out announcing this work, the institute’s Executive Director for Space Studies, Alan Stern (a former colleague of mine from the University of Colorado), talked about some of the assumptions they made in constructing their model: “”The Sedna formation simulations assumed that the primordial solar nebula was a disk about the size of those observed around many nearby middle-aged stars — like the well-known example of the 1,500-AU-wide disk around the star Beta Pictoris.”
It’s interesting work because it gives us a whole lot MORE insight into the infancy of our own solar system, in particular the formation of planets from smaller planetesimals. And, chances are if Sedna formed where the astronomers think it did, then there could well be more large planetoids circling around out there with it — and that what we used to think of as the “emptiness of the outer solar system” isn’t so empty anymore. As astronomers learn more about the Sun’s outermost retinue of planetesimals, they are finding more clues to what conditions were like early in the history of solar system.

The Sights and Sounds of Titan!

Courtesy the Cassini-Huygens Mission Mission to Saturn and Titan
Courtesy the Cassini-Huygens Mission to Saturn and Titan

Yesterday I returned home from the AAS meeting. It was a long flight day, and I logged some airport time waiting for flights. So I decided to try out the ever-present T-Mobile wireless hotspots to see if I could check on the progress of the Huygens data from Titan and the Cassini-Huygens mission via their websites. I’m sure everybody’s seen the images by now. We’re in a great age of planetary exploration when we can tune in to the latest pics from Mars and Saturn every day, if we so wish it! I can pretty well guess how excited the scientists were to find out that their probe had settled down to the surface of Titan and had returned a treasure trove of 90 minutes worth of data before falling silent.

And what a collection! I’d always pictured Titan as this place with hydrocarbon-sludge oceans and maybe a frozen surface. So, the pictures were not a total surprise in that regard. But it was still exciting to see actual rocks and a surface. A friend of mine called this morning and said that it reminded him of Venus, only many hundreds of degrees colder!

If you browse around the Cassini-Huygens web site, you’ll find more pictures, plus a neat page of “sounds” from Titan. It will be interesting to see what else they post in the next few days that will shed more insight into a world that once was hidden and veiled—and still holds surprises for us all.