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Thread: Sedna, Oort Cloud, and Heliopause

  1. #1

    Sedna, Oort Cloud, and Heliopause

    Is Sedna a Kuiper Belt Object or an Oort Cloud Object? I was under the impression it orbited within the Oort Cloud, but several people have told me that is incorrect, that Sedna is a Kuiper Belt Object.

    Also, is the Oort Cloud located before or after the heliopause? My understanding is that the heliopause is the area where the sun's gravity stops having any effect on any objects, aka, the end of our solar system. But recently, I've seen a visual depiction of the solar system that shows the Oort Cloud out past the heliopause. How is this possible? Isn't the Oort Cloud still within the sun's sphere of influence? It's the source of long period comets, which appears to mean there has to be some gravitational influence from the sun pushing these comets further into the solar system. If the Oort Cloud were beyond the heliopause, how could there be any attraction of its comets toward the sun?

  2. #2
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    The Heliopause is well inside the Ooort Cloud.
    The Heliopause is NOT something that prevents gravity from affecting things outside it. Oort Cloud objects are still attracted to the Sun.

    Sedna is most likely a Kuiper Belt object that got thrown into a higher orbit through some gravitational interaction a long time ago.
    Forming opinions as we speak

  3. #3
    So what exactly is the heliopause?

    Is Sedna currently orbiting in the Kuiper Belt or in the Oort Cloud?

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    Quote Originally Posted by laurele View Post
    So what exactly is the heliopause?
    The Heliopause is where the Solar Wind meets the Interstellar Medium.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heliosphere

  5. #5
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    Offhand, I think Sedna is a "scattered disk object" (SDO). The disk
    referred to is the Kuiper belt. SDOs are thought to be KBOs (Kuiper
    belt objects) scattered outward from the Kuiper belt by gravitational
    interactions with other large bodies. I don't understand how a large
    body in the Kuiper belt could get moved around unless there was an
    even larger body in that region. SDOs and KBOs are both TNOs
    (trans-Neptunian objects). As of September 2006 (when I looked
    through the online lists from the Minor Planet Center, and counted),
    over 1000 TNOs had been catalogued.

    No actual Oort cloud objects have been seen yet, AFAIK.

    -- Jeff, in Minneapolis
    http://www.FreeMars.org/jeff/

    "I find astronomy very interesting, but I wouldn't if I thought we
    were just going to sit here and look." -- "Van Rijn"

    "The other planets? Well, they just happen to be there, but the
    point of rockets is to explore them!" -- Kai Yeves

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    m1omg showed me this illustration. Sedna is not an Oort Cloud object. I don't think any Oort Cloud object has been seen, but perhaps some long period comets are known to have come from there.

    The problem is the vast distance to the Oort Cloud and the fact that their reflected sunlight varies inversely as to the fourth power of their distance. IIRC, Jupiter would be too dim and object even for the HST if it were about 10,000 a.u. distance, which is only 1/5th the outer region for the Oort Cloud.

  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by laurele View Post
    Is Sedna a Kuiper Belt Object or an Oort Cloud Object? I was under the impression it orbited within the Oort Cloud, but several people have told me that is incorrect, that Sedna is a Kuiper Belt Object.

    Also, is the Oort Cloud located before or after the heliopause? My understanding is that the heliopause is the area where the sun's gravity stops having any effect on any objects, aka, the end of our solar system. But recently, I've seen a visual depiction of the solar system that shows the Oort Cloud out past the heliopause. How is this possible? Isn't the Oort Cloud still within the sun's sphere of influence? It's the source of long period comets, which appears to mean there has to be some gravitational influence from the sun pushing these comets further into the solar system. If the Oort Cloud were beyond the heliopause, how could there be any attraction of its comets toward the sun?
    Attraction or perturbation?

    For a plausible scenario see : "A wide binary solar companion as a possible origin of Sedna-like objects" located here.
    Where the telescope ends, the microscope begins. Which of the two has the greater view?

  8. #8
    Quote Originally Posted by laurele View Post
    Also, is the Oort Cloud located before or after the heliopause? My understanding is that the heliopause is the area where the sun's gravity stops having any effect on any objects, aka, the end of our solar system.
    Just as something to keep in mind, there is no place, even in the entire universe, where the sun's graviy stops having any effect on objects. Graviy decreases with distance but never becomes zero. So (theoretically, though not usefully in practice) all objects in the universe with mass exert some gravitational effect on all others.

    The heliopause is actually (I think) the place where the solar wind stops flowing outward.
    As above, so below

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    Quote Originally Posted by Jeff Root View Post
    Offhand, I think Sedna is a "scattered disk object" (SDO)
    That's what I think.

    Sedna's eccentricity is 0.855, which is very eccentric compared to classical KBOs (or Cubewanos), which have eccentricities of about 0.0-0.2.

    Sedna semimajor axis is 526 AU, which is again off the scale for KBOs, which mostly have semimajor axes of 40-50 AU.

  10. #10
    "If the Oort Cloud were beyond the heliopause, how could there be any attraction of its comets toward the sun?"

    "Attraction or perturbation?"

    I have to admit I'm somewhat ignorant here. Could you explain the difference between attraction and perturbation?

    Thank you to everyone who has taken the time to answer this question. My knowledge of astronomy is still quite limited, and I admit to not having been familiar with some of the concepts raised here, such as the interstellar medium. I appreciate all the links, references, and explanations BAUT members have provided.

  11. #11
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    An attraction is a hug, a perturbation a slap.

  12. #12
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    Quote Originally Posted by laurele View Post
    "If the Oort Cloud were beyond the heliopause, how could there be any
    attraction of its comets toward the sun?"

    "Attraction or perturbation?"

    I have to admit I'm somewhat ignorant here. Could you explain the
    difference between attraction and perturbation?
    A.DIM was not sure whether you were asking about the constant
    gravitational attraction of comets toward the Sun, which keeps them
    in orbit around the Sun, or the varying gravitational perturbations
    caused by the varying distances to planets or other large bodies,
    which sometimes makes the comets move closer to the Sun.

    A perturbation is just a change in an orbit. The most common cause
    of perturbations is gravitational attraction between the body of interest
    (in this case, comets in the Oort cloud) and a planet. For comets,
    another significant cause of orbit perturbation is outgassing. Gasses
    escaping from the surface of a comet act like jets or rockets, pushing
    the comet arount, changing its orbit.

    As I think you have already learned, the heliopause isn't relevant to
    the gravitational attraction between the Sun and comets. The force
    of gravity is weak at that distance, but it is enough.

    -- Jeff, in Minneapolis
    http://www.FreeMars.org/jeff/

    "I find astronomy very interesting, but I wouldn't if I thought we
    were just going to sit here and look." -- "Van Rijn"

    "The other planets? Well, they just happen to be there, but the
    point of rockets is to explore them!" -- Kai Yeves

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