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Hubble Hunts Down Binary Objects at the Fringe of Our Solar System

Target Name:  Kuiper Belt
Spacecraft:  Hubble Space Telescope
Produced by:  NASA
Copyright: NASA Copyright Free Policy
Cross Reference:  STScI-PR02-04
Date Released: 17 April 2002

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NASA's Hubble Space Telescope snapped pictures of a double system of icy bodies in the Kuiper Belt. This composite picture shows the apparent orbit of one member of the pair. In reality, the objects, called 1998 WW31, revolve around a common center of gravity, like a pair of waltzing skaters. This picture shows the motion of one member of the duo [the six faint blobs] relative to the other [the large white blob]. The blue oval represents the orbital path. Astronomers assembled this picture from six separate exposures, taken from July to September 2001, December 2001, and January to February 2002.

Astronomers used the Hubble telescope to study the orbit of this binary system. They then used that information to determine other characteristics of the duo, such as their total mass, and their orbital period (the time it takes them to orbit each other).

Credit: NASA and C. Veillet (Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope)

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