(Redirected from (20000) Varuna):''This article is about '20000 Varuna', a minor planet. For other uses of the word, see
Varuna (disambiguation)''
'20000 Varuna' ("VAR oo na") is a large
classical Kuiper Belt object (KBO). It previously had the
provisional designation '' and has been
precovered in plates dating back to 1953. Under the
International Astronomical Union's
2006 draft proposal for the definition of a planet, Varuna would be labelled a
dwarf planet if it were proven to be
spherical.
Name
Varuna is named after the
Hindu god Varuna. He is the god of the
sky,
rain,
oceans and
rivers, and the
celestial ocean. He is also a god of
law and the
underworld, especially concerned with the souls of the drowned. He is sometimes considered analogous to
Poseidon.
Size
Image:EightTNOs.png|thumb|250px|left|Varuna compared to Eris, Pluto, (136472) 2005 FY9, (136108) 2003 EL61, Sedna, Orcus, Quaoar, and Earth.
#Earth
rect 646 1714 2142 1994 The Earth
#Eris and Dysnomia
circle 226 412 16 Dysnomia
circle 350 626 197 (136199) Eris
#Pluto and Charon
circle 1252 684 86 Charon
circle 1038 632 188 (134340) Pluto
#2005 FY9
circle 1786 614 142 (136472) 2005 FY9
#2003 EL61
circle 2438 616 155 (136108) 2003 EL61
#Sedna
circle 342 1305 137 (90377) Sedna
#Orcus
circle 1088 1305 114 (90482) Orcus
#Quaoar
circle 1784 1305 97 (50000) Quaoar
#Varuna
circle 2420 1305 58 (20000) Varuna
desc none
# - setting this to "bottom-right" will display a (rather large) icon linking to the graphic, if desired
#Notes:
#Details on the new coding for clickable images is here:
#While it may look strange, it's important to keep the codes for a particular system in order. The clickable coding treats the first object created in an area as the one on top.
#Moons should be placed on "top" so that their smaller circles won't disappear "under" their respective primaries.
The size of the large KBOs can be determined by simultaneous observations of thermal emission and reflected sunlight. Unfortunately, thermal measures, intrinsically weak for distant objects are further hampered by the absorption of the Earth atmosphere as only the weak ‘tail’ of the emissions is accessible to Earth-based observations. In addition, the estimates are model-dependent with the unknown parameters (e.g. pole orientation and thermal inertia) to be assumed. Consequently, the estimates of the albedo vary resulting in sometimes substantial differences in the inferred size.
A recent thermal model estimates the size at '936' km.
Orbit

Orbits of Varuna (blue) and Pluto (red).
Varuna is classified as a classical trans-Neptunian object and follows a near-circular orbit with a semi-major axis of ~43 AU, similar to that of but more inclined. Its orbital period is similar to Quaoar at 283 Earth years.
The graph shows the polar view (top; Varuna’s orbit in blue, ’s in red, Neptune in grey). The spheres illustrate the current (April 2006) positions, relative sizes and colours. The perihelia (q), aphelia (Q) and the dates of passage are also marked.
Interestingly, the orbits of Varuna and Pluto have similar inclination and are similarly oriented (the nodes of both orbits are quite close).
At 43 AU and on a near-circular orbit, unlike Pluto which is in 2:3 orbital resonance with Neptune, Varuna is free from any significant perturbation from Neptune.
The ecliptic view illustrates the comparison of Varuna's near-circular orbit with that of Pluto (highly eccentric, e=0.25), both similarly inclined.
Physical characteristics
Varuna has a rotational period of approximately 3.17 hours (or 6.34 hours, depending on whether the light curve is single or double-peaked). Given the rapid rotation, rare for objects so large, Varuna is thought to be an elongated spheroid (ratio of axis 2:3), with a mean density around 1g/cm³ (roughly the density of water ice).[6] Examination of Varuna's light curve has found that the best-fit model for Varuna is a triaxial ellipsoid with the axes a,b,c in relations: b/a = 0.63 − 0.80, c/a = 0.45 − 0.52 and a bulk density of 0.992 g/cm³.2 Since the discovery of Varuna, another, even larger, rapidly rotating (3.9 h) object has been discovered, also thought to have an elongated shape.[7]
The surface of Varuna is moderately red (similar to ) but exceptionally dark (albedo<0.04) compared with other large classical Kuiper Belt objects, suggesting that the surface is largely devoid of ice.
References
1. TNO/Centaur diameters and albedos
2. Lightcurves Lacerda P., Jewitt D.
''Dentisities Of Solar System Objects From Their Rotational Lightcurves", accepted to AJ Dec. 2006 Preprint
3. TNO and Centaur Colors
4. The size and albedo of the Kuiper-belt object (20000) Varuna, Jewitt D, Aussel H, Evans A, , , Nature, 2001 PMID 11373669. Reprint on the Author's site.
5. ''Coordinated thermal and optical observations of Trans-Neptunian object (20 000)Varuna from Sierra Nevada'', E. Lellouch, R. Moreno, J. L. Ortiz, G. Paubert, A. Doressoundiram and N. Peixinho, , , Astronomy & Astrophysics, 2002 Preprint on arXiv.
6. Physical Properties Of Trans-Neptunian Object (20000) Varuna, Jewitt D, Sheppard S, , , Astronomical Journal, 2002 Preprint on arXiv.
7. D. L. Rabinowitz, K. M. Barkume, M. E. Brown, H. G. Roe, M. Schwartz, S. W. Tourtellotte, C. A. Trujillo (2005), ''Photometric Observations Constraining the Size, Shape, and Albedo of , a Rapidly Rotating, Pluto-Sized Object in the Kuiper Belt'', The Astrophysical Journal (2006), '639', Issue 2, pp. 1238-1251 Preprint on arXiv (pdf)
External links
★ Size and Albedo of Kuiper Belt Object (20000) Varuna Site updated Reretrived on 2006-07-10
★ Orbit simulation from NASA JPL site