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======================================
Rare
astronomical alignment observed by MIT, Williams College
======================================
For
Immediate Release
TUESDAY,
JULY 19, 2005
Contact:
James Elliot, MIT
Phone:
617-253-6308
Email:
jle@mit.edu
OR
Jay
Pasachoff, Williams College
Phone:
617-285-6351
E-mail:
jmp@williams.edu
CAMBRIDGE,
Mass.--In a feat of astronomical and terrestrial alignment, a group of
scientists from MIT (Cambridge, Mass.) and Williams College (Williamstown,
Mass.) recently succeeded in observing distant Pluto's tiny moon, Charon, hide
a star. Such an event had been
seen only once before, by a single telescope 25 years ago, and then not nearly
as well. The MIT-Williams consortium spotted it with four telescopes in Chile
on the night of July 10-11.
In
addition to assessing whether Charon has an atmosphere, the team expects to get
a new, accurate value for Charon's radius and determine how round it is. The team had more than 100 square
meters (about 1,000 square feet) of telescope surface facing Charon, Pluto and
the star beyond them-a noticeable fraction of the world's total telescope area.
The
data and results from the recent observation will be presented at the 2005
meeting of the American Astronomical Society's Division of Planetary Sciences
meeting to be held in Cambridge, England, in September.
MIT
team leader James L. Elliot headed the group at the Clay Telescope at Las
Campanas Observatory in Chile.
"We
have been waiting many years for this opportunity. Watching Charon approach the star and then snuff it out was
spectacular," said Elliot, a professor in MIT's Department of Earth,
Atmospheric and Planetary Science and in the Department of Physics.
Jay
M. Pasachoff, Williams College team leader and a professor in the Department of
Astronomy, said, "It's amazing that people in our group could get in the
right place at the right time to line up a tiny body 4 billion miles away. It's
quite a reward for so many people who worked so hard to arrange and integrate
the equipment and to get the observations."
With
the Clay Telescope's 6.5-meter mirror (more than 21 feet across, the size of a
large room) the researchers were able to observe changes in fractional seconds
throughout the event, which lasted less than a minute. While their electronic
cameras sensitively recorded data, the light of the faint star was seen to dim
and then, some seconds later, brighten. This kind of disappearance of a
celestial body behind a closer, apparently larger one is known as an
occultation.
From
just how the light dimmed and brightened, the MIT-Williams consortium will look
for signs that Charon has an atmosphere. It has very little mass, so has little
gravity to hold in an atmosphere, but it is so cold (being some 40 times
farther from the sun than the Earth, and thus about 4 billion miles away) that
some gases could be held in place by the small amount of Charon's gravity. The
group had previously investigated Pluto's atmosphere and found a slight global
warming there. They had earlier found a similar warming of the atmosphere of
Neptune's moon Triton, which is an analogue of Pluto.
Other
telescopes around Chile used by the MIT-Williams consortium included the
8-meter (more than 26 feet across) Gemini South on Cerro Pachon, the 2.5-meter
(over 8 feet across) DuPont Telescope at Las Campanas Observatory, and the
0.8-meter (almost 3 feet across) telescope at the Cerro Armazones Observatory
of Chile's Catholic University of the North near Cerro Paranal.
The
team had searched for a distribution of telescopes along a north-south line in
Chile since the predictions of the starlight shadow of Charon were uncertain by
several hundred kilometers. Since
the star that was hidden is so far away, it casts a shadow of Charon that is
the same size as Charon itself, about 1,200 kilometers in diameter. To see the
event, the distant star, Charon, and the telescopes in Chile had to be
perfectly aligned. All these telescopes were in clear weather and successfully
observed the occultation.
At
Las Campanas Elliot and MIT graduate student Elisabeth Adams observed with the
Clay Telescope, while Amanda Gulbis, a postdoctoral associate at MIT, and David
Osip of the Carnegie Institution of Washington observed with the DuPont
Telescope. Williams College scientist Bryce Babcock and Williams undergraduate
Joseph Gangestad, joined by MIT graduate student Michael Person, observed with
the telescope of Cerro Armazones Observatory in Chile's Atacama Desert, the
telescope that was farthest north. MIT graduate student Susan Kern supervised
the observations taken with the giant 8-meter Gemini South project on Cerro Pachon,
the southernmost of the telescopes.
Pasachoff
and Williams scientist Steven Souza were at a 0.6-meter (2 feet across)
telescope at the Brazilian National Observatory, Pico dos Dias, northeast of
S‹o Paulo. They were joined by Professor Marcelo Emilio of Brazil's Ponta
Grossa State University and his undergraduate student Caroline Czelusniak.
However, clouds foiled their observing.
The
images from three telescopes in Chile, including the Clay Telescope, and one in
Brazil, were taken with new electronic cameras and computer control obtained by
MIT and Williams with an equipment grant from NASA. The expeditions were
sponsored by NASA's Planetary Astronomy Program.
A
video showing the star dimming as Charon passes in front of it and then
brightening again is posted on the Web at
http://occult.mit.edu/research/occultations/Charon/C313.2/C313OccMovie.html.
Teams
from the Observatory of Paris at Meudon and from the Southwest Research
Institute in Boulder, Colo., also observed the occultation.