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Astronomers Propose Names For Two Recently Discovered Icy Moons Of Uranus
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- Date: Fri, 1 May 1998 23:02:01 GMT
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Cornell University News Service
Contact: David Brand
Office: (607) 255-3651
E-Mail: deb27@cornell.edu
FOR RELEASE: May 1, 1998
Caliban and Sycorax
Astronomers propose names for their two recently discovered icy moons of Uranus
ITHACA, N.Y. -- Cornell University astronomer Philip Nicholson and his
colleagues have proposed names for the two recently discovered moons of the
planet Uranus. They are Caliban and Sycorax, both characters in
Shakespeare's play "The Tempest." The names are likely to be approved by the
International Astronomical Union.
The astronomers detail their discovery of the two moons in a report in the
April 30 issue of the magazine Nature. They confirm that Caliban and Sycorax
are the faintest planetary moons yet imaged by ground-based telescopes. The
discovery of the two moons was reported on Oct. 31 by Nicholson and
colleagues Joseph Burns, professor of engineering and astronomy at Cornell,
Brett Gladman of the Canadian Institute for Theoretical Physics at the
University of Toronto, and J.J. Kavelaars of McMaster University, Canada.
The team used light-sensitive semiconductors, called charge-coupled devices,
attached to the 5-meter Hale telescope on Mount Palomar, Calif., to track
the irregular, or non-circular, orbits of the two moons. Regular satellites
orbit near a planet's equatorial plane. The two moons are the first
irregular satellites discovered around Uranus.
Both Caliban and Sycorax, the astronomers write, are unusually red in color,
which suggests a link with the recently discovered populations of comet-like
bodies called trans-Neptunian objects, which orbit the sun beyond the orbit
of Neptune, and Centaurs, which cross the orbits of the outer planets.
Both trans-Neptunians and Centaurs, say the researchers, have a wide range
of reddish colors, perhaps resulting from the bombardment of their
organic-rich icy surfaces. Nicholson says this bombardment could be from
cosmic rays or from the sun's ultraviolet radiation. The methane on the
moons' surfaces, he says, would be "cooked" by the radiation into
hydrocarbons, showing up as a dark red through a telescope's filters.
The two moons, say the researchers, are presumed to have been captured by
Uranus early in the history of the solar system. "My guess is that the moons
were once trans-Neptunians and they became Centaurs and were captured by
Uranus and became satellites," says Nicholson. Since the newly discovered
moons are likely to have been captured by Uranus soon after its formation,
the Nature article notes, "their physical properties may provide clues to
conditions in the early solar system."
The process of capture could have taken two forms, Nicholson says. The moons
could have been trapped by Uranus gravity as they came close to the planet.
Another theory, he says, is that in the early days of the solar system
Uranus might have been surrounded by a gaseous nebula that would have caused
a drag on the objects' movement as they came close to the planet.
Nicholson estimates that Caliban, the smaller of the two moons, has a
diameter of 60 kilometers (37 miles) and is orbiting Uranus at an average
distance of about 7.2 million kilometers (4.5 million miles), taking 1.6
years to complete one revolution. Sycorax, he estimates, has a diameter of
120 kilometers (74.5 miles) and takes 3.5 years to complete one orbit of
Uranus at a mean distance of about 12.2 million kilometers (7.5 million
miles) from the planet. However, he says, Sycorax has a much more elliptical
orbit than Caliban, bringing it as close as 6 million kilometers (3.7
million miles) to the planet.
The composition of the two moons, says Nicholson, "is probably a
plum-pudding mixture of rocks and ice."
All 15 previously known satellites of Uranus lie on fairly evenly spaced,
nearly circular orbits. Most recently Voyager 2, in 1985 and 1986,
discovered 10 small, dark inner moons.
Jupiter has eight known irregular satellites, of which the last, Leda, was
discovered in 1974. Saturn has one, Phoebe, discovered in 1898, and Neptune
has one, Nereid, discovered in 1949.
To see images of the two newly discovered moons of Uranus, go to Gladman's
page on the World Wide Web at
http://www.cita.utoronto.ca/~gladman/uranus.html.