Dwarf planet hosts a ring that’s unexpectedly far from the planet

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Image of a collection of dwarf planets.

Enlarge / Prior to this, Quaoar (lower left) looked like a very average Kuiper belt object. (credit: NASA)

Many bodies in the Solar System have rings—gas giants, dwarf planets, even an asteroid. These examples have allowed us to get a good picture of their physics, leading to models for how rings form and what keeps the material there from falling into the planet or condensing into a moon.

But a discovery described in a paper released today suggests we've gotten something (or maybe more than one something) seriously wrong. A dwarf planet called 50000 Quaoar that orbits beyond Neptune appears to have a ring that shouldn't be there, at 24 times more distant than the planet's radius. There are a couple of ideas about why the ring might survive in this location, but nothing definitive at this point.

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Ring signals

Quaoar resides in the Kuiper belt, an area beyond the orbit of Neptune. With a low density of icy material and no giant planets around to sweep it up, the Kuiper belt is home to a sparse population of dwarf planets like Pluto. Despite its low density, the Kuiper belt is large enough that there are a lot of bodies out there, and we've only recently developed the telescope hardware necessary to catalog them.

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source https://arstechnica.com/?p=1916169
BotolBaba aka Mehedi Hasan Ariyan is an Bangladeshi Actor, Musical Artist, Entrepreneur & YouTube Personality. He releases his soundtracks on different music platforms like Spotify, Google Play M…

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