Title
Charon's size and an upper limit on its atmosphere from a stellar occultation
Date Issued
05 January 2006
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Sicardy B.
Bellucci A.
Gendron E.
Lacombe F.
Lacour S.
Lecacheux J.
Lellouch E.
Renner S.
Pau S.
Roques F.
Widemann T.
Vachier F.
Martins R.V.
Ageorges N.
Hainaut O.
Marco O.
Beisker W.
Hummel E.
Feinstein C.
Levato H.
Maury A.
Frappa E.
Gaillard B.
Lavayssière M.
Di Sora M.
Mallia F.
Masi G.
Behrend R.
Carrier F.
Mousis O.
Rousselot P.
Alvarez-Candal A.
Lazzaro D.
Veiga C.
Andrei A.H.
Assafin M.
Da Silva Neto D.N.
Jacques C.
Pimentel E.
Weaver D.
Lecampion J.F.
Doncel F.
Momiyama T.
Tancredi G.
Instituto de Mecánica Celeste y Cálculo de Efemérides, IMCCE
Publisher(s)
Nature Publishing Group
Abstract
Pluto and its satellite, Charon (discovered in 1978; ref. 1), appear to form a double planet, rather than a hierarchical planet/satellite couple. Charon is about half Pluto's size and about one-eighth its mass. The precise radii of Pluto and Charon have remained uncertain, leading to large uncertainties on their densities2. Although stellar occultations by Charon are in principle a powerful way of measuring its size, they are rare, as the satellite subtends less than 0.3 microradians (0.06 arcsec) on the sky. One occultation (in 1980) yielded a lower limit of 600 km for the satellite's radius 3, which was later refined to 601.5 km (ref. 4). Here we report observations from a multi-station stellar occultation by Charon, which we use to derive a radius, RC = 603.6 ± 1.4 km (1σ), and a density of ρ = 1.71 ± 0.08 g cm-3. This occultation also provides upper limits of 110 and 15 (3σ) nanobar for an atmosphere around Charon, assuming respectively a pure nitrogen or pure methane atmosphere. © 2006 Nature Publishing Group.
Start page
52
End page
54
Volume
439
Issue
7072
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Astronomía
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-30144441877
Source
Nature
ISSN of the container
00280836
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus