Exploring the outer solar system with the ESSENCE Supernova Survey
Artículo
Open/ Download
Publication date
2008-07-20Metadata
Show full item record
Cómo citar
Becker, A. C.
Cómo citar
Exploring the outer solar system with the ESSENCE Supernova Survey
Author
- Becker, A. C.;
- Arraki, K.;
- Kaib, N. A.;
- Wood-Vasey, W. M.;
- Aguilera, C.;
- Blackman, J. W.;
- Blondin, S.;
- Challis, P.;
- Clocchiatti, A.;
- Covarrubias, R.;
- Damke, G.;
- Davis, Tamara M.;
- Filippenko, Alexei V.;
- Foley, Ryan J.;
- Garg, A.;
- Garnavich, Peter M.;
- Hicken, M.;
- Jha, S.;
- Kirshner, Robert P.;
- Krisciunas, Kevin;
- Leibundgut, B.;
- Li, Weidong;
- Matheson, Thomas;
- Miceli, A.;
- Miknaitis, G.;
- Narayan, G.;
- Pignata Libralato, Giuliano;
- Prieto, J. L.;
- Rest, A.;
- Riess, A. G.;
- Salvo, M. E.;
- Schmidt, Brian P.;
- Smith, R. C.;
- Sollerman, J.;
- Spyromilio, J.;
- Stubbs, C. W.;
- Suntzeff, Nicholas B.;
- Tonry, J. L.;
- Zenteno, A.;
Abstract
We report the discovery and orbital determination of 14 trans-Neptunian objects (TNOs) from the ESSENCE Supernova Survey difference imaging data set. Two additional objects discovered in a similar search of the SDSS-II Supernova Survey database were recovered in this effort. ESSENCE repeatedly observed fields far from the solar system ecliptic (-21 degrees < beta < -5 degrees), reaching limiting magnitudes per observation of I approximate to 23.1 R approximate to 23.7. We examine several of the newly detected objects in detail, including 2003 UC414, which orbits entirely 23.7 between Uranus and Neptune and lies very close to a dynamical region that would make it stable for the lifetime of the solar system. 2003 SS422 and 2007 TA(418) have high eccentricities and large perihelia, making them candidate members of an outer class of TNOs. We also report a new member of the "extended" or "detached" scattered disk, 2004 VN112, and verify the stability of its orbit using numerical simulations. This object would have been visible to ESSENCE for only similar to 2% of its orbit, suggesting a vast number of similar objects across the sky. We emphasize that off-ecliptic surveys are optimal for uncovering the diversity of such objects, which in turn will constrain the history of gravitational influences that shaped our early solar system.
Identifier
URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/125065
Quote Item
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL LETTERS Volume: 682 Issue: 1 Pages: L53-L56 Published: JUL 20 2008
Collections