Tag Archives: ringed

James Webb Space Telescope discovers ice at ringed asteroid Chariklo

The most comprehensive plans need a sprinkle of luck, even in space.

In October 2022, the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST or Webb) watched as Chariklo, a tiny ringed asteroid, eclipsed a star. This event, called an occultation, marked a first for Webb. At the month’s end, Webb turned toward Chariklo again and notched another victory: For the first time, astronomers analyzing the telescope’s data spotted clear signs of water ice, the presence of which was only hinted at until now. These observations will guide astronomers to better understand the nature and behavior of tiny bodies in the outer reaches of our solar system.

But the two feats almost did not happen.

Related: Asteroid Chariklo Has Rings: Images of a Space Rock Oddity (Gallery)

Although it is the largest of its kind, Chariklo is still too small and too far for even the mighty Webb to photograph directly. Instead, astronomers decided to study it through occultation, which is an indirect but powerful method to study small bodies like Chariklo. But the team did not know if and when a star — without which an occultation would not occur — would fall into Webb’s field of view. This made Chariklo part of Webb’s target of opportunity (opens in new tab) program: If the asteroid happened to cross in front of a star, the program would allow astronomers to temporarily interrupt the telescope’s schedule to observe the event.

The team calculated only a 50% chance that Webb would spot a star bright enough with an interesting object like Chariklo crossing in front. After its launch in 2021, as Webb went through routine course corrections to hold it steady in its parking spot in space, the team continued predicting and revising its list of possible occultations. Late last year, astronomers ended up on the favorable side of that 50% when they discovered “by remarkable good luck” that Chariklo was on track to occult a star that also fell into Webb’s view.

“This was the first stellar occultation attempted with Webb,” the team wrote in a NASA statement (opens in new tab) published Wednesday (Jan. 25). “A lot of hard work went into identifying and refining the predictions for this unusual event.”

On Oct. 18, 2022, Chariklo and its system of two rings crossed in front of a star. Using Webb’s near-infrared camera (NIRCam), astronomers monitored the star’s brightness for an hour. Resulting data showed two dips in the star’s brightness as expected: When the asteroid’s rings first hid the star as the eclipse began, and again when the last of its rings wrapped up the occultation.

“The shadows produced by Chariklo’s rings were clearly detected,” the team wrote in the statement, “demonstrating a new way of using Webb to explore solar system objects.”

Read more: How the James Webb Space Telescope works in pictures

Graphic showing the dimming effects of Chariklo’s rings on a background star. (Image credit: IMAGE: NASA, ESA, CSA, Leah Hustak (STScI) SCIENCE: Pablo Santos-Sanz (IAA-CSIC), Nicolás Morales (IAA-CSIC), Bruno Morgado (UFRJ, ON/MCTI, LIneA))

Objects like Chariklo are called centaurs, thanks to their hybrid nature. (Centaurs are mythological horse-human hybrids.) They look like asteroids but behave like comets — complete with visible tails. Their home, an unstable orbit between Jupiter and Neptune, hosts thousands of centaurs of varying shapes and sizes. As interesting as they are, their small size and vast distance make them difficult to study. The composition of even the biggest centaur, Chariklo — which is still tiny at just 160 miles (250 km) in diameter and distant at a whooping 2 billion miles (3.2 billion km) from us — is poorly understood. Also, past research hinted at water ice somewhere in Chariklo’s system, but had yet to conclusively detect it.

In this latest research, astronomers pointed Webb at Chariklo again. This time, they used the telescope’s Near-infrared Spectrograph (NIRSpec) instrument to measure the sunlight reflected by Chariklo and its two rings. The resulting spectrum showed three absorption bands of water ice, marking the first clear indication of crystalline ice.

The presence of crystalline ice likely indicates that Chariklo is subject to constant bombardment, according to Dean Hines, an astronomer at the Space Telescope Science Institute in Maryland. “Because high-energy particles transform ice from crystalline into amorphous states, detection of crystalline ice indicates that the Chariklo system experiences continuous micro-collisions that either expose pristine material or trigger crystallization processes,” Hines said in NASA’s statement.

Read more: Centaurs Rising: NASA Eyes Missions to Weird Asteroid-Comet Hybrids

Reflectance spectrum of the double-ringed centaur 10199 Chariklo, captured by Webb’s Near-Infrared Spectrograph (NIRSpec) on Oct. 31, 2022. This spectrum shows clear evidence for crystalline water ice on Chariklo’s surface.  (Image credit: IMAGE: NASA, ESA, CSA, Leah Hustak (STScI) SCIENCE: Noemí Pinilla-Alonso (FSI/UCF), Ian Wong (STScI), Javier Licandro (IAC))

Astronomers have gotten one step closer to studying the Chariklo system, but there is still much that remains unknown about the centaur. The spectrum analyzed in the latest research includes information about the system as a whole, but at the moment, it is difficult to distinguish the data between Chariklo and its two rings.

For example, although astronomers spotted the first clear signs for crystalline water ice, they do not yet know for sure where in the asteroid’s system the ice is present. In the coming months, researchers hope to use Webb’s high sensitivity to dig up individual features of Chariklo and its two rings, Pablo Santos-Sanz, an astronomer at the Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía in Spain who took part in this research, said in the statement.

“We hope [to] gain insight into why this small body even has rings at all, and perhaps detect new fainter rings,” Santos-Sanz said.

Follow Sharmila Kuthunur on Twitter @Sharmilakg (opens in new tab).  Follow us @Spacedotcom (opens in new tab), or on Facebook (opens in new tab) and Instagram (opens in new tab). 



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Earth sits in the center of a ‘superbubble’ ringed by baby stars – now we know why

Astronomers have known for decades that our solar system sits in the middle of a bubble in space about 1,000 light-years wide with incredibly young stars on its “surface,” but now researchers think they’ve figured out how it got there.

In a new study published in Nature, astronomers at the Center for Astrophysics, Harvard & Smithsonian (CfA) and the Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) used computer modeling to travel back in time to reproduce the evolution of the Local Bubble, as it is called.

Apparently, it took a whole lot of supernovae. Starting about 14 million years ago, a relatively rapid sequence of stellar explosions – about 15 in total – pushed interstellar gas and dust outward, carving out a low-density cavity with a dense gas and dust rich “edge”, providing ideal conditions for the formation of new stars.

“We’ve calculated that about 15 supernovae have gone off over millions of years to form the Local Bubble that we see today,” said Catherine Zucker, an astronomer and data visualization expert who worked on the project for CfA and is now a NASA Hubble Fellow at STScI. “This is really an origin story; for the first time we can explain how all nearby star formation began.”

Stars typically don’t just form on their own. They usually need a push of some kind to get clouds of gas and dust to clump together enough to begin fusing hydrogen and ignite into full-fledged stellar furnaces. 

The expansion of the Local Bubble is providing exactly that kind of disturbance in the molecular cloud to kickstart the star-formation process, and it is still expanding even as you read this.

“It’s coasting along at about 4 miles per second,” Zucker said. “It has lost most of its oomph though and has pretty much plateaued in terms of speed.”


Analysis: wait, why didn’t we get blown up by all those supernovae?

If you’re wondering how our solar system survived with 15 or so supernovae blowing up all around it 14 million years ago, you’re right to ask that question.

Fortunately for us, we weren’t actually in the Local Bubble when all of this started popping off. We’re only just passing through it at the moment, entering into the bubble about five million years ago. 

In about 5 million years, we’ll pass out of it as well, but for now, we get to enjoy the sight of being surrounded by what is essentially a stellar nursery.

“When the first supernovae that created the Local Bubble went off, our Sun was far away from the action,” said João Alves, a professor at the University of Vienna and co-author on the study. “But about five million years ago, the Sun’s path through the galaxy took it right into the bubble, and now the Sun sits — just by luck — almost right in the bubble’s center.”

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Saturn at opposition: How to watch the ringed planet line up with Earth

The Hubble Space Telescope took a fresh look at Saturn during its northern hemisphere summer.


NASA, ESA, A. Simon (Goddard Space Flight Center), M.H. Wong (University of California, Berkeley), and the OPAL Team

Saturn, with its glorious rings, is a gem in the night sky, and a prime Saturn viewing opportunity is coming up. The night of Sunday, Aug. 1 and morning of Monday, Aug. 2 will mark the planet’s opposition — when it’s lined up with the sun and Earth is in the middle, like a celestial sandwich.

In its daily skywatching guide, NASA called out early Monday morning as a prime viewing time. “Saturn is directly opposite the sun from Earth on this date. Around the time of opposition it’s visible all night, reaching its highest point around midnight,” the space agency said.

Gas giant Jupiter will be getting in on the opposition action this month, too, with its big date set for Aug. 19. As with Saturn, it will be visible all night and reach its highest point around midnight. 

The annual opposition typically means a planet is brighter than usual, but the Minnesota Institute for Astrophysics notes “the difference will hardly be noticeable, given how far out Jupiter, and especially Saturn, orbit.”

A stargazing app can help you dial in the location of Saturn, which will rise in the east as night falls. This is a great time to break out your binoculars for a closer look. Even better, a small telescope can help bring the planet’s storied rings into focus. With the right gear, you might even spot its biggest moon Titan looking like a nearby dot of light.

You don’t have to hit opposition on the nose to enjoy the spectacle. The ringed planet should be easy to spot in the night sky for days on either side of the main event. The same goes for Jupiter. August is a perfect month for planet-spotting.

Follow CNET’s 2021 Space Calendar to stay up to date with all the latest space news this year. You can even add it to your own Google Calendar.      

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