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Unmanned Spaceflight.com _ Cometary and Asteroid Missions _ Discovery of a Binary Centaur

Posted by: ljk4-1 May 31 2006, 08:38 PM

Astrophysics, abstract
astro-ph/0605606

From: Keith Noll [view email]

Date: Tue, 23 May 2006 22:07:40 GMT (68kb)

Discovery of a Binary Centaur

Authors: K. S. Noll, H. F. Levison, W. M. Grundy, D. C. Stephens

Comments: 20 pages, 4 figures, 1 table accepted for publication in Icarus

We have identified a binary companion to (42355) 2002 CR46 in our ongoing deep survey using the Hubble Space Telescope's High Resolution Camera. It is the first companion to be found around an object in a non-resonant orbit that crosses the orbits of giant planets. Objects in orbits of this kind, the Centaurs, have experienced repeated strong scattering with one or more giant planets and therefore the survival of binaries in this transient population has been in question. Monte Carlo simulations suggest, however, that binaries in (42355) 2002 CR46 -like heliocentric orbits have a high probability of survival for reasonable estimates of the binary's still-unknown system mass and separation. Because Centaurs are thought to be precursors to short period comets, the question of the existence of binary comets naturally arises; none has yet been definitively identified. The discovery of one binary in a sample of eight observed by HST suggests that binaries in this population may not be uncommon.

http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0605606

Posted by: BruceMoomaw May 31 2006, 11:24 PM

Looks like support for the recent theory that Triton started out as a binary before half of it was captured into Neptune orbit.

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