The
Kuiper belt ( , rhyming with "viper"),
sometimes called the
Edgeworth-Kuiper belt, is a
region of the
Solar System beyond the
planets extending from the
orbit of
Neptune (at 30
AU)
to approximately 55
AU from the
Sun. It is similar to the
asteroid belt, although it is far larger—20
times as wide and 20–200 times as massive. Like the asteroid belt,
it consists mainly of
small
bodies, or remnants from the Solar System's formation. While
the asteroid belt is composed primarily of
rock and
metal, the
Kuiper belt objects are composed largely of frozen
volatiles (termed "ices"), such as
methane,
ammonia and
water. It is home to at least three
dwarf planets –
Pluto,
Haumea and
Makemake.
Since they were first discovered in 1992, the number of known
Kuiper belt objects (
KBOs) has
increased to over a thousand, and more than 70 000 KBOs over
100 km in diameter are believed to exist. The Kuiper belt was
initially believed to be the main repository for
periodic comets, those with orbits lasting
less than 200 years. However, studies since the mid-1990s have
shown that the Kuiper belt is dynamically stable, and that it is
the farther
scattered disc, a
dynamically active region created by the outward motion of Neptune
4.5 billion years ago, that is their true place of origin.
Scattered disc objects such as
Eris are KBO-like bodies with extremely
large orbits that take them as far as 100 AU from the Sun. Their
dynamic orbits occasionally force them into the inner Solar System,
becoming first
centaurs, and
then short-period comets. Some of the Solar System's
moons, such as
Neptune's
Triton and Saturn's
Phoebe, are also believed to have originated
in this region. Pluto is the largest known member of the Kuiper
belt. Originally considered a planet, Pluto's position as part of
the Kuiper belt has caused it to be redefined as a "
dwarf planet". It is compositionally similar to
many other objects of the Kuiper belt, and its orbital period is
identical to that of the KBOs known as "
Plutinos". In Pluto's honour, the four currently
accepted dwarf planets beyond Neptune's orbit are called "
plutoids".
The Kuiper belt should not be confused with the hypothesized
Oort cloud, which is a thousand times
more distant. The objects within the Kuiper belt, together with the
members of the
scattered disc and any
potential
Hills cloud or Oort cloud
objects, are collectively referred to as
trans-Neptunian objects (TNOs).
History
Since the discovery of Pluto, many have speculated that it might
not be alone. The region now called the Kuiper belt had been
hypothesized in various forms for decades. It was only in 1992 that
the first direct evidence for its existence was found. The number
and variety of prior speculations on the nature of the Kuiper belt
have led to continued uncertainty as to who deserves credit for
first proposing it.
Hypotheses
The first
astronomer to suggest the
existence of a trans-Neptunian population was
Frederick C. Leonard. In 1930, soon after Pluto's
discovery, he pondered whether it was "not likely that in Pluto
there has come to light the
first of a
series of
ultra-Neptunian bodies, the remaining members of which still await
discovery but which are destined eventually to be detected".

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In 1943, in the
Journal of the British Astronomical
Association,
Kenneth
Edgeworth hypothesised that, in the region beyond
Neptune, the material within the
primordial solar
nebula was too widely spaced to condense into planets, and so
rather condensed into a myriad of smaller bodies. From this he
concluded that “the outer region of the solar system, beyond the
orbits of the planets, is occupied by a very large number of
comparatively small bodies" and that, from time to time, one of
their number "wanders from its own sphere and appears as an
occasional visitor to the inner solar system,” becoming a
comet.
In 1951, in an article for the journal
Astrophysics,
Gerard Kuiper speculated on a similar
disc having formed early in the Solar System's evolution, however,
he did not believe that such a belt still existed today. Kuiper was
operating on the assumption common in his time, that
Pluto was the size of the Earth, and had therefore
scattered these bodies out toward the Oort cloud or out of the
Solar System. Were Kuiper's hypothesis correct, there would not be
a Kuiper belt where we now see it.
The hypothesis took many other forms in the following decades: in
1962, physicist
Al G.W. Cameron postulated the existence of “a
tremendous mass of small material on the outskirts of the solar
system,” while in 1964,
Fred Whipple,
who popularised the famous "
dirty
snowball" hypothesis for cometary structure, thought that a
"comet belt" might be massive enough to cause the purported
discrepancies in the orbit of
Uranus that had
sparked the search for
Planet X, or at the
very least, to affect the orbits of known comets. Observation,
however, ruled out this hypothesis.
In 1977,
Charles Kowal discovered
2060 Chiron, an icy planetoid with an
orbit between Saturn and Uranus. He used a
blink comparator; the same device that had
allowed
Clyde Tombaugh to discover
Pluto nearly 50 years before. In 1992, another
object
5145 Pholus, was discovered in a
similar orbit. Today, an entire population of comet-like bodies,
the
centaurs, is known to exist
in the region between Jupiter and Neptune. The centaurs' orbits are
unstable and have dynamical lifetimes of a few million years. From
the time of Chiron's discovery, astronomers speculated that they
therefore must be frequently replenished by some outer
reservoir.
Further evidence for the belt's existence later emerged from the
study of comets. That comets have finite lifespans has been known
for some time. As they approach the Sun, its heat causes their
volatile surfaces to sublimate
into space, eating them gradually away. In order to still be
visible over the age of the Solar System, they must be frequently
replenished. One such area of replenishment is the
Oort cloud; the spherical swarm of comets
extending beyond 50 000
AU
from the Sun first hypothesised by astronomer
Jan Oort in 1950. It is believed to be the point of
origin for
long period comets,
those, like
Hale-Bopp, with orbits lasting
thousands of years.
There is however another comet population, known as
short period or
periodic comets; those, like
Halley, with orbits lasting less than 200
years. By the 1970s, the rate at which short-period comets were
being discovered was becoming increasingly inconsistent with them
having emerged solely from the
Oort
cloud. For an Oort cloud object to become a short-period comet,
it would first have to be captured by the giant planets. In 1980,
in the
Monthly
Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society,
Julio Fernandez stated that
for every short period comet to be sent into the inner solar system
from the Oort cloud, 600 would have to be ejected into interstellar
space. He speculated that a comet belt from between 35 and 50
AU would be required to account
for the observed number of comets. Following up on Fernandez's
work, in 1988 the Canadian team of Martin Duncan, Tom Quinn and
Scott Tremaine ran a number of
computer simulations to determine if all observed comets could have
arrived from the Oort cloud. They found that the Oort cloud could
not account for short-period comets, particularly as short-period
comets are clustered near the plane of the Solar System, whereas
Oort cloud comets tend to arrive from any point in the sky. With a
belt as Fernandez described it added to the formulations, the
simulations matched observations. Reportedly because the words
"Kuiper" and "comet belt" appeared in the opening sentence of
Fernandez's paper, Tremaine named this region the "Kuiper
belt."
Discovery

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In 1987,
astronomer David Jewitt, then at
MIT
, became
increasingly puzzled by "the apparent emptiness of the outer Solar
System." He encouraged then-graduate student
Jane Luu to aid him in his endeavour to locate
another object beyond
Pluto's orbit, because,
as he told her, "If we don't, nobody will."
Using telescopes at
the Kitt Peak National Observatory
in Arizona
and the
Cerro Tololo Inter-American
Observatory
in Chile
, Jewitt and
Luu conducted their search in much the same way as Clyde Tombaugh
and Charles Kowal had, with a blink
comparator. Initially, examination of each pair of
plates took about eight hours, but the process was sped up with the
arrival of electronic
charge-coupled devices or CCDs, which,
though their field of view was narrower, were not only more
efficient at collecting light (they retained 90 percent of the
light that hit them, rather than the ten percent achieved by
photographs) but allowed the blinking process to be done virtually,
on a computer screen. Today, CCDs form the basis for most
astronomical detectors. In 1988, Jewitt moved to the Institute of
Astronomy at the
University of
Hawaii. Luu later joined him to work at the University of
Hawaii’s 2.24 m telescope at Mauna Kea. Eventually, the field of
view for CCDs had increased to 1024 by 1024 pixels, which allowed
searches to be conducted far more rapidly. Finally, after five
years of searching, on August 30, 1992, Jewitt and Luu announced
the "Discovery of the candidate Kuiper belt object" ; Six months
later, they discovered a second object in the region, (181708) 1993
FW.
Studies since the trans-Neptunian region was first charted have
shown that in fact, the region now called the Kuiper belt is not
the point of origin for short-period comets, but that they instead
derive from a separate but linked population called the
scattered disc. The scattered disc was
created when Neptune
migrated outward
into the proto-Kuiper belt, which at the time was much closer to
the Sun, and left in its wake a population of dynamically stable
objects which could never be affected by its orbit (the Kuiper belt
proper), and a separate population whose perihelia are close enough
that Neptune can still disturb them as it travels around the Sun
(the scattered disc). Because the scattered disc is dynamically
active and the Kuiper belt relatively dynamically stable, the
scattered disc is now seen as the most likely point of origin for
periodic comets.
Name
Astronomers will sometimes use alternative name
Edgeworth-Kuiper belt to credit Edgeworth, and
KBOs are occasionally referred to as EKOs. However,
Brian Marsden claims neither deserve true
credit; "Neither Edgeworth or Kuiper wrote about anything remotely
like what we are now seeing, but
Fred
Whipple did." Conversely, David Jewitt comments that, "If
anything . . . Fernandez most nearly deserves the credit for
predicting the Kuiper Belt." The term
trans-Neptunian object (TNO)
is recommended for objects in the belt by several scientific groups
because the term is less controversial than all others — it is not
a
synonym though, as TNOs, include all
objects orbiting the Sun past the orbit of
Neptune, not just those in the Kuiper belt.
Origins

Simulation showing Outer Planets and
Kuiper Belt: a)Before Jupiter/Saturn 2:1 resonance b)Scattering of
Kuiper Belt objects into the solar system after the orbital shift
of Neptune c)After ejection of Kuiper Belt bodies by Jupiter
The
precise origins of the Kuiper belt and its complex structure are
still unclear, and astronomers are awaiting the completion of
several wide-field survey telescopes such as Pan-STARRS and the future LSST
, which
should reveal many currently unknown KBOs. These surveys
will provide data that will help determine answers to these
questions.
The Kuiper belt is believed to consist of
planetesimals; fragments from the original
protoplanetary disc around the
Sun that failed to fully coalesce into planets
and instead formed into smaller bodies, the largest less than
3000 km in diameter.
Modern
computer simulations show the
Kuiper belt to have been strongly influenced by
Jupiter and
Neptune, and also
suggest that neither
Uranus nor
Neptune could have formed
in situ beyond
Saturn, as too little primordial matter existed at that range to
produce objects of such high mass. Instead, these planets are
believed to have formed closer to Jupiter, and
migrated outwards during the course of
the Solar System's early evolution. Eventually, the orbits shifted
to the point where Jupiter and Saturn existed in an exact 2:1
resonance; Jupiter orbited the Sun twice for every one Saturn
orbit. The gravitational pull from such a resonance ultimately
disrupted the orbits of Uranus and Neptune, causing Neptune's orbit
to move outward into the primordial planetesimal disk, which sent
the disk into temporary chaos. As Neptune traveled along this
modified orbit, it excited and scattered many TNO planetesimals
into higher and more eccentric orbits, depleting the primordial
population.
However, the present
most popular model
still fails to account for many of the characteristics of the
distribution and, quoting one of the scientific articles, the
problems "continue to challenge analytical techniques and the
fastest numerical modeling hardware and software".
Structure
At its fullest extent, including its outlying regions, the Kuiper
belt stretches from roughly 30 to 55 AU. However, the main body of
the belt is generally accepted to extend from the 2:3 resonance
(
see below) at 39.5 AU to the 1:2
resonance at roughly 48 AU. The Kuiper belt is quite thick, with
the main concentration extending as much as ten degrees outside the
ecliptic plane and a more
diffuse distribution of objects extending several times farther.
Overall it more resembles a
torus or doughnut
than a belt. Its mean position is inclined to the ecliptic by 1.86
degrees.
The presence of
Neptune has a profound
effect on the Kuiper belt's structure due to
orbital resonances. Over a timescale
comparable to the age of the Solar System, Neptune's gravity
destabilises the orbits of any objects which happen to lie in
certain regions, and either sends them into the inner Solar System
or out into the
Scattered disc or
interstellar space. This causes the Kuiper belt to possess
pronounced gaps in its current layout, similar to the
Kirkwood gaps in the
Asteroid belt. In the region between 40 and 42
AU, for instance, no objects can retain a stable orbit over such
times, and any observed in that region must have migrated there
relatively recently.
Classical belt
Between approximately 42–48 AU, however, the gravitational
influence of Neptune is negligible, and objects can exist with
their orbits essentially unmolested. This region is known as the
classical Kuiper belt,
and its members comprise roughly two thirds of KBOs observed to
date. Because the first modern KBO discovered,
1992 QB1, is considered the prototype of this
group, classical KBOs are often referred to as
cubewanos ("Q-B-1-os"). The
guidelines
established by the
IAU demand that classical
KBOs be given names of mythological beings associated with
creation.
The classical Kuiper belt appears to be a composite of two separate
populations. The first, known as "dynamically cold" population, has
orbits much like the planets; nearly circular, with an
orbital eccentricity of less than 0.1,
and with relatively low inclinations up to about 10° (they lie
close to the plane of the Solar System rather than at an angle).
The second, the "dynamically hot" population, has orbits much more
inclined to the ecliptic, by up to 30°. The two populations have
been named this way not because of any major difference in
temperature, but from analogy to particles in a gas, which increase
their relative velocity as they become heated up. The two
populations not only possess different orbits, but different
compositions; the cold population is markedly redder than the hot,
suggesting it formed in a different region. The hot population is
believed to have formed near Jupiter, and to have been ejected out
by movements among the gas giants. The cold population, on the
other hand, is believed to have formed more or less in its current
position although it may also have been later swept outwards by
Neptune during its
migration.
Resonances
When an object's orbital period is an exact ratio of Neptune's (a
situation called a
mean motion
resonance), then it can become locked in a synchronised motion
with Neptune and avoid being perturbed away if their relative
alignments are appropriate. If, for instance, an object is in just
the right kind of orbit so that it orbits the Sun two times for
every three Neptune orbits, then whenever it returns to its
original position, Neptune will always be half an orbit away from
it, or in the same position as it began to it, since it will have
completed 1½ orbits in the same time. This is known as the 2:3 (or
3:2) resonance, and it corresponds to a characteristic
semi-major axis of about 39.4 AU. This
2:3 resonance is populated by about 200 known objects, including
Pluto together with its moons. In recognition
of this, the other members of this family are known as
Plutinos. Many Plutinos, including Pluto, often
have orbits which cross that of Neptune, though their resonance
means they can never collide. Many others, such as
90482 Orcus and
28978
Ixion, are large enough to likely
qualify as plutoids when more is
known about them. Plutinos have high orbital eccentricities,
suggesting that they are not native to their current positions but
were instead thrown haphazardly into their orbits by the migrating
Neptune. IAU guidelines dictate that all Plutinos must, like Pluto,
be named for underworld deities. The 1:2 resonance (whose objects
complete half an orbit for each of Neptune's) corresponds to
semi-major axes of ~47.7AU, and is sparsely populated. Its
residents are sometimes referred to as
twotinos. Other resonances also exist at 3:4, 3:5,
4:7 and 2:5. Neptune possesses a number of
trojan objects, which occupy its
L4 and L5 points;
gravitationally stable regions leading and trailing it in its
orbit. Neptune trojans are often described as being in a 1:1
resonance with Neptune. Neptune trojans are remarkably stable in
their orbits and are unlikely to have been captured by Neptune, but
rather to have formed alongside it.
Additionally, there is a relative absence of objects with
semi-major axes below 39 AU which cannot apparently be explained by
the present resonances. The currently accepted hypothesis for the
cause of this is that as Neptune migrated outward, unstable orbital
resonances moved gradually through this region, and thus any
objects within it were swept up, or gravitationally ejected from
it.
"Kuiper cliff"

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The
1:2
resonance appears to be an edge beyond which few objects are
known. It is not clear whether it is actually the outer edge of the
Classical belt or just the beginning of a broad gap. Objects have
been detected at the 2:5 resonance at roughly 55 AU, well outside
the classical belt; however, predictions of a large number of
bodies in classical orbits between these resonances have not been
verified through observation.
Earlier models of the Kuiper belt had suggested that the number of
large objects would increase by a factor of two beyond 50 AU; so
this sudden drastic falloff, known as the "Kuiper cliff", was
completely unexpected, and its cause, to date, is unknown.
Bernstein and Trilling et al. have found evidence that the rapid
decline in objects of 100 km or more in radius beyond 50 AU is
real, and not due to observational bias. Possible explanations
include that material at that distance is too scarce or too
scattered to accrete into large objects, or that subsequent
processes removed or destroyed those which did form.
Patryk Lykawka of Kobe University
has claimed that the gravitational attraction of an
unseen large planetary object, perhaps the size of Earth or Mars,
might be responsible.
Composition

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Studies of the Kuiper belt since its discovery have generally
indicated that its members are primarily composed of ices; a
mixture of light hydrocarbons (such as
methane),
ammonia, and water
ice, a composition they share with
comets. The low densities observed in those KBOs
whose diameter is known, (less than 1 g cm
−3) is
consistent with an icy makeup. The temperature of the belt is only
about 50K, so many compounds that would be gaseous closer to the
Sun remain solid.
Due to their small size and extreme distance from Earth, the
chemical makeup of KBOs is very difficult to determine. The
principal method by which astronomers determine the composition of
a celestial object is
spectroscopy.
When an object's light is broken into its component colours, an
image akin to a rainbow is formed. This image is called a
spectrum. Different substances absorb light at
different wavelengths, and when the spectrum for a specific object
is unravelled, dark lines (called
absorption lines) appear where the
substances within it have absorbed that particular wavelength of
light. Every
element or
compound has its own unique
spectroscopic signature, and by reading an object's full spectral
"fingerprint", astronomers can determine what it is made of.
Initially, such detailed analysis of KBOs was impossible, and so
astronomers were only able to determine the most basic facts about
their makeup, primarily their colour. These first data showed a
broad range of colours among KBOs, ranging from neutral grey to
deep red. This suggested that their surfaces were composed of a
wide range of compounds, from dirty ices to hydrocarbons. This
diversity was startling, as astronomers had expected KBOs to be
uniformly dark, having lost most of their volatile ices to the
effects of cosmic rays. Various solutions were suggested for this
discrepancy, including resurfacing by impacts or outgassing.
However, Jewitt and Luu's spectral analysis of the known Kuiper
belt objects in 2001 found that the variation in colour was too
extreme to be easily explained by random impacts.
Although to date most KBOs still appear spectrally featureless due
to their faintness, there have been a number of successes in
determining their composition. In 1996, Robert H. Brown
et
al. obtained spectroscopic data on the KBO 1993 SC, revealing
its surface composition to be markedly similar to that of
Pluto, as well as Neptune's moon
Triton, possessing large amounts of
methane ice.
Water ice has been detected in several KBOs, including
1996 TO66,
2000 EB173
and
2000 WR106. In 2004, Mike Brown
et al. determined the existence of crystalline water ice
and
ammonia hydrate
on one of the largest known KBOs,
50000
Quaoar. Both of these substances would have been destroyed over
the age of the solar system, suggesting that Quaoar had been
recently resurfaced, either by internal tectonic activity or by
meteorite impacts.
Mass and size distribution

Illustration of the power law.
Despite its vast extent, the collective mass of the Kuiper belt is
relatively low. The upper limit to the total mass is estimated at
roughly a tenth the mass of the Earth, with some estimates placing
it at a thirtieth an Earth mass. Conversely, models of the Solar
System's formation predict a collective mass for the Kuiper belt of
30 Earth masses. This missing >99% of the mass can hardly be
dismissed, as it is required for the accretion of any KBOs larger
than 100 km in diameter. If the Kuiper belt had always had its
current low density these large objects simply could not exist.
Moreover, the eccentricity and inclination of current orbits makes
the encounters quite "violent," resulting in destruction rather
than accretion.It appears that either the current residents of the
Kuiper belt have been created closer to the Sun or some mechanism
dispersed the original mass. Neptune’s current influence is too
weak to explain such a massive "vacuuming", though the
Nice model proposes that it could have been the
cause of mass removal in the past. While the question remains open,
the conjectures vary from a passing star scenario to grinding of
smaller objects, via collisions, into dust small enough to be
affected by solar radiation.
Bright objects are rare compared with the dominant dim population,
as expected from accretion models of origin, given that only some
objects of a given size would have grown further. This relationship
N(D), the population expressed as a function of the diameter,
referred to as brightness slope, has been confirmed by
observations. The slope is inversely proportional to some power of
the diameter D.
- \frac{d N}{d D} \sim D^{-q} where the current measures give q =
4 ±0.5.
Less formally, there are for instance 8 (=2³) times more objects in
100–200 km range than objects in 200–400 km range. In
other words, for every object with the diameter of 1000 km
there should be around 1000 (=10³) objects with diameter of
100 km.
The law is expressed in this differential form rather than as a
cumulative cubic relationship, because only the middle part of the
slope can be measured; the law must break at smaller sizes, beyond
the current measure.
Of course, only the magnitude is actually known, the size is
inferred assuming
albedo (not a safe
assumption for larger objects).
Scattered objects

The orbits of objects in the scattered
disc; the classical KBOs are blue, while the 2:5 resonant objects
are green.
The scattered disc is a sparsely populated region beyond the Kuiper
belt, extending as far as 100 AU and farther.
Scattered disc objects (SDOs) travel
in highly elliptical orbits, usually also highly inclined to the
ecliptic. Most models of solar system formation show both KBOs and
SDOs first forming in a primordial comet belt, while later
gravitational interactions, particularly with Neptune, sent the
objects spiraling outward; some into stable orbits (the KBOs) and
some into unstable orbits, becoming the scattered disc. Due to its
unstable nature, the scattered disc is believed to be the point of
origin for many of the Solar System's short-period comets.
According to the
Minor Planet
Center, which officially catalogues all trans-Neptunian
objects, a KBO, strictly speaking, is any object that orbits
exclusively within the defined Kuiper belt region regardless of
origin or composition. Objects found outside the belt are classed
as scattered objects. However, in some scientific circles the term
"Kuiper belt object" has become synonymous with any icy planetoid
native to the outer solar system believed to have been part of that
initial class, even if its orbit during the bulk of solar system
history has been beyond the Kuiper belt (e.g. in the scattered disk
region). They often describe scattered disc objects as "scattered
Kuiper belt objects."
Eris, the
recently discovered object now known to be larger than Pluto, is
often referred to as a KBO, but is technically an SDO. A consensus
among astronomers as to the precise definition of the Kuiper belt
has yet to be reached, and this issue remains unresolved.
The centaurs, which are not
normally considered part of the Kuiper belt, are also believed to
be scattered objects, the only difference being that they were
scattered inward, rather than outward. The
Minor Planet Center groups the centaurs
and the SDOs together as scattered objects.
Triton
.jpg/200px-Triton_moon_mosaic_Voyager_2_(large).jpg)
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During its period of migration, Neptune is thought to have captured
one of the larger KBOs and set it in orbit around itself. This is
its moon
Triton, which is the only
large moon in the Solar System to have a
retrograde orbit; it orbits in the opposite
direction to Neptune's rotation. This suggests that, unlike the
large moons of Jupiter and Saturn, which are thought to have
coalesced from spinning discs of material encircling their young
parent planets, Triton was a fully formed body that was captured
from surrounding space. Gravitational capture of an object is not
easy; it requires that some force act upon the object to slow it
down enough to be snared by the larger object's gravity. How this
happened to Triton is not well understood, though it does suggest
that Triton formed as part of a large population of similar objects
whose gravity could impede its motion enough to be captured. Triton
is only slightly larger than Pluto, and spectral analysis of both
worlds shows that they are largely composed of similar materials,
such as
methane and
carbon monoxide. All this points to the
conclusion that Triton was once a KBO that was captured by Neptune
during its
outward migration.
Largest KBOs
Since the year 2000, a number of KBOs with diameters of between 500
and 1200 km (about half that of Pluto) have been discovered.
50000 Quaoar, a classical KBO
discovered in 2002, is over 1200 km across. (originally ,
nicknamed "Easterbunny") and (originally , nicknamed "Santa"), both
announced on July 29, 2005, are larger still. Other objects, such
as
28978 Ixion (discovered in 2001) and
20000 Varuna (discovered in 2000)
measure roughly 500 km across.
Pluto
The discovery of these large KBOs in similar orbits to Pluto led
many to conclude that, bar its relative size,
Pluto was not particularly different from other
members of the Kuiper belt. Not only did these objects approach
Pluto in size, but many also possessed satellites, and were of
similar composition (methane and carbon monoxide have been found
both on Pluto and on the largest KBOs). Thus, just as
Ceres was considered a planet before
the discovery of its fellow
asteroids, some
began to suggest that Pluto might also be reclassified.
The issue was brought to a head by the discovery of
Eris, an object in the
scattered disc far beyond the Kuiper belt,
that is now known to be 27 percent more massive than Pluto. In
response, the
International Astronomical
Union (IAU), was forced to
define a planet for the first time, and
in so doing included in their definition that a planet must have
"
cleared the neighbourhood
around its orbit." As Pluto shared its orbit with so many KBOs, it
was deemed not to have cleared its orbit, and was thus reclassified
from a planet to a member of the Kuiper belt.
Though Pluto is the largest KBO, a number of objects outside the
Kuiper belt which may have begun their lives as KBOs are larger.
Eris is the most obvious example, but Neptune's moon
Triton, which, as explained above, is probably
a captured KBO, is also larger than Pluto.
As of 2008, only five objects in the Solar System, Ceres, Pluto,
Eris, Makemake and Haumea, are considered dwarf planets. However, a
number of other Kuiper belt objects are also large enough to be
spherical and could be classified as dwarf planets in the
future.
Satellites
Of the four largest TNOs, three (Eris, Pluto, and Haumea) possess
satellites, and two have more than one. A higher percentage of the
largest KBOs possess satellites than the smaller objects in the
Kuiper belt, suggesting that a different formation mechanism was
responsible. There are also a high number of binaries (two objects
close enough in mass to be orbiting "each other") in the Kuiper
belt. The most notable example is the Pluto-Charon binary, but it
is estimated that over 1 percent of KBOs (a high percentage) exist
in binaries.
Exploration

150 px
On January 19, 2006 the first spacecraft mission to explore the
Kuiper belt,
New Horizons, was
launched.
The mission, headed by Alan Stern of the Southwest
Research Institute
, will arrive at Pluto on July
14, 2015 and, circumstances permitting, will continue on to study
another as-yet undetermined KBO. Any KBO chosen will be
between 25 and 55 miles (40 to 90 km) in diameter and,
ideally, white or grey, to contrast with Pluto's reddish colour.
John Spencer, an astronomer on the
New Horizons mission
team, says that no target for a post-Pluto Kuiper belt encounter
has yet been selected, as they are awaiting data from the
Pan-STARRS survey project to ensure as wide a
field of options as possible. The Pan-STARRS project, due to come
fully online by 2009, will survey the entire sky with four 1.4
gigapixel digital cameras to detect any moving objects, from
near-earth objects to KBOs.
Other Kuiper belts
, astronomers have resolved dust disks believed to be Kuiper belt-like structures around nine stars other than the Sun. They appear to fall into two categories: wide belts, with radii of over 50 AU, and narrow belts (like our own Kuiper belt) with diameters of between 20 and 30 AU and relatively sharp boundaries. Most known debris discs around other stars are fairly young, but the two images on the left, taken by the Hubble Space Telescope in January, 2006, are old enough (roughly 300 million years) to have settled into stable configurations. The left image is a "top view" of a wide belt, and the right image is an "edge view" of a narrow belt. The black central circle is produced by the camera's coronagraph which hides the central star to allow the much fainter disks to be seen. Beyond this, 15-20% of solar-type stars have an observed infrared excess which is believed to indicate massive Kuiper Belt like structures.
See also
References
External links and data sources