Hubble Finds "Tenth Planet" is Slightly Larger Than Pluto

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April 11, 2006

Grey Hautaluoma/Dwayne Brown
Headquarters, Washington
(202) 358-0668/1726

Ray Villard
Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore, Md.
(410) 338-4514

RELEASE: 06-183

HUBBLE FINDS "TENTH PLANET" IS SLIGHTLY LARGER THAN PLUTO

For the first time, NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has seen distinctly 
the "tenth planet," currently nicknamed "Xena," and has found that it 
is only slightly larger than Pluto.

Though previous ground-based observations suggested that Xena's 
diameter was about 30 percent greater than Pluto, Hubble observations 
taken Dec. 9 and 10, 2005, showed Xena's diameter as 1,490 miles 
(with an uncertainty of 60 miles). Pluto's diameter, as measured by 
Hubble, is 1,422 miles.

"Hubble is the only telescope capable of getting a clean visible-light 
measurement of the actual diameter of Xena," said Mike Brown, 
planetary scientist at the California Institute of Technology in 
Pasadena, Calif. Brown's research team discovered Xena, officially 
cataloged as 2003 UB313, and its results have been accepted for 
publication in the Astrophysical Journal.

Only a handful of images were required to determine Xena's diameter. 
Located 10 billion miles from Earth with a diameter a little more 
than half the width of the United States, the object is 1.5 pixels 
across in Hubble's view. That's enough to make a precise size 
measurement.

Because Xena is smaller than previously thought, but comparatively 
bright, it must be one of the most reflective objects in the solar 
system. The only object more reflective is Enceladus, a geologically 
active moon of Saturn whose surface is continuously recoated with 
highly reflective ice by active geysers.

Xena's bright reflectivity is possibly due to fresh methane frost on 
its surface. The object may have had an atmosphere when it was closer 
to the sun, but as it moved to its current location farther away this 
atmosphere would have "frozen out," settling on the surface as frost.

Another possibility is that Xena leaks methane gas continuously from 
its warmer interior. When this methane reaches the cold surface, it 
immediately freezes solid, covering craters and other features to 
make it uniformly bright to Hubble's telescopic eye.

Xena's takes about 560 years to orbit the sun, and it is now very 
close to aphelion (the point on its orbit that is farthest from the 
sun).Brown next plans to use Hubble and other telescopes to study 
other recently discovered Kuiper Belt objects that are almost as 
large as Pluto and Xena. The Kuiper Belt is a vast ring of primordial 
icy comets and larger bodies encircling Neptune's orbit.

Finding that the largest known Kuiper Belt object is a virtual twin to 
Pluto may only further complicate the debate about whether to 
categorize the large icy worlds that populate the belt as planets. If 
Pluto were considered to be the minimum size for a planet, then Xena 
would fulfill this criterion, too. In time, the International 
Astronomical Union will designate the official name.

The Hubble Space Telescope is an international cooperative project 
between NASA and the European Space Agency. The Space Telescope 
Science Institute in Baltimore conducts Hubble science operations. 
The Institute is operated for NASA by the Association of Universities 
for Research in Astronomy, Inc., Washington

For electronic images and more Hubble news, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/hubble

	
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