The Guardian Australia

Scientists discover ring around dwarf planet Haumea beyond Neptune

- Katharina Kropshofer

A ring has been discovered around one of the dwarf planets that orbits the outer reaches of the solar system.

Until now, ring-like structures had only been found around the four outer planets – Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune.

“In 2014 we discovered that a very small body in the Centaurs region [an area of small celestial bodies between the asteroid belt and Neptune] had a ring and at that time it seemed to be a very weird thing,” explained Dr José Ortiz, whose group at the Instituto de Astrofísic­a de Andalucía in Granada made the discovery described in the journal Nature. “We didn’t expect to find a ring around Haumea, but we were not too surprised either.”

Thousands of so-called Neptunian objects are located in the outer solar system. In 2006, it was revealed that some of them could be as large as Pluto, which led the Internatio­nal Astronomic­al Union to create the category of dwarf planets.

Haumea was recognised by the Internatio­nal Astronomic­al Union in 2008 and is one of five dwarf planets, alongside Pluto, Ceres, Eris and Makemake. They are located beyond Neptune – 50 times farther away from the sun than Earth.

Haumea, named after the Hawaiian goddess of childbirth, is unusual because of its elongated shape, comparable to a rugby ball, and its rapid rotation, spinning around once every 3.9 hours. Its diameter is approximat­ely a third of the size of Earth’s moon.

“Dwarf planets are unique by themselves but Haumea is even more special among them,” said Ortiz “It also has two moons, a large and a small one, and the larger one turns out to be in the same plane as the ring we found.”

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