What are Trans neptunian objects?

Trans-Neptunian objects (TNO) are any solar system minor planet that orbits the sun at a greater average distance than Neptune. Pluto is now considered a TNO, as is Eris. As of July 2014, over 1,500 trans-Neptunian objects have been cataloged and of these, some 200 have been designated as dwarf planets. From Earth, astronomers study TNO heat emissions, colors, and spectra.The Kuiper Belt is a region beyond the orbit of Neptune at 30 Astronomical Units (AU) to about 50 AU from the sun. It is sometimes called the Edgeworth–Kuiper Belt . The Kuiper Belt is much larger than the Asteroid Belt. It’s about twenty times as wide and twenty to two hundred times as massive. Kuiper Belt objects, called KBOs , are composed of rock and metal, like the asteroids, but also frozen ices like ammonia, methane, and water. Trans-Neptunian objects are Kuiper Belt objects (KBOs), but KBOs are not TNOs because the distance range of KBOs from the sun is much farther out in the solar system.

Studying colours and spectra provides insight into the objects’ origin and a potential correlation with other classes of objects, namely centaurs and some satellites of giant planets (Triton, Phoebe), suspected to originate in the Kuiper belt. However, the interpretations are typically ambiguous as the spectra can fit more than one model of the surface composition and depend on the unknown particle size. More significantly, the optical surfaces of small bodies are subject to modification by intense radiation, solar wind and micrometeorites. Consequently, the thin optical surface layer could be quite different from the regolith underneath, and not representative of the bulk composition of the body.

 

Picture Credit : Google