USA TODAY International Edition

Put a ring on it: New find encircles dwarf planet

- Doyle Rice @usatodaywe­ather USA TODAY

As kids, we all knew Saturn was the one planet in our solar system with rings.

Then, rings were also discovered around Jupiter, Uranus and Neptune. And now a new study reports that a ring has been spotted around another object in our solar system: Haumea, a weird, egg-shaped, distant dwarf planet located beyond Neptune.

This is the first time that a ring has been discovered around such a distant body in the solar system, according to the study, which appeared in the peer-reviewed British journal Nature.

“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,” study lead author José Ortiz told The Guardian. “We didn’t expect to find a ring around Haumea, but we were not too surprised either.”

Ortiz is the head of the Instituto de Astrofísic­a de Andalucía in Spain, which made the discovery. The team was able to spot the rings by using 12 telescopes from 10 different laboratori­es on Jan. 21, 2017, as Haumea passed in front of a distant star, a process known as occultatio­n.

His team said that Haumea’s ring has a width of about 43 miles and a radius of roughly 1,400 miles.

“There are different possible explanatio­ns for the formation of the ring; it may have originated in a collision with another object, or in the dispersal of surface material due to the planet’s high rotational speed,” Ortiz said.

Haumea, which spins on its axis every four hours, is one of the fastest-rotating objects in the solar system.

Astronomer­s also recently spotted rings around the dwarf planets Chariklo and Chiron, which are located between Saturn and Uranus. Unlike ordinary planets, dwarf planets are defined as being bodies that have not cleared other material out of their orbital path, according to Nature.

The new discovery shows that the presence of rings could be much more common in our solar system as well as in other planetary systems, Ortiz said.

Haumea, which takes 284 years to orbit the sun, is named for the Hawaiian goddess of childbirth and fertility, NASA said.

 ?? IAA-CSIC/UHU ?? An artist’s conception of Haumea and its ring system. The ring was discovered by telescopes on Jan. 21.
IAA-CSIC/UHU An artist’s conception of Haumea and its ring system. The ring was discovered by telescopes on Jan. 21.

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