Planetary Society contributions

The Planetary Society is recognized in the paper for a 2013 Shoemaker NEO grant to the Astronomical Observatory of the Autonomous Region of the Aosta Valley, located in the Italian Alps. The $9,120 award allowed observers there to re-aluminize a 0.81-meter telescope mirror and install equipment to increase the telescope's field of view. The improved telescope makes many NEO observations, but it's also used for other efforts such as the Haumea transit.

Two Aosta Valley researchers are paper co-authors: Albino Carbognani and Jean Marc Christille. In an email, I asked Carbognani to describe his experience observing the Haumea transit. Here is his response, edited slightly for clarity and brevity:

Watching an occultation is always a bet because these are events that last for just tens of seconds, and there are many things that can go wrong, such as weather conditions or computer failure. The exciting thing is that you never know what you will find.

In the case of Haumea, it was thought there might be other satellites, in addition to the known ones, or a thin atmosphere (like Pluto's). Instead, we found a ring. And this was the first ring discovered beyond Neptune!

During the occultation everything went well. The satisfaction of having participated in the physical characterization of Haumea is difficult to explain, but more or less comparable to my discovery of the asteroid "Valléedaoste" in 2007.

In any case, the contribution of the Planetary Society was important because without the refurbishment of the telescope optics, the performance of the instrument would surely not be so good for the photometric observation of this distant solar system world.

Another Planetary Society-funded contribution came from Herman Mikuz, a paper co-author who operates the Crni Vrh Observatory in Slovenia. Crni Vrh's 0.6-meter telescope was funded partially by a 2000 Shoemaker grant, and averages multiple NEO discoveries each year. In 2010, a second Shoemaker grant of $8,000 helped purchase a new CCD, which was used for the Haumea observations.

More to explore

The Haumea paper also includes new estimates for size, shape and density. As the dwarf planet itself passed in front of the star, the drop in starlight was abrupt, meaning Haumea probably lacks a global atmosphere like Pluto's.

What the new Nature findings mean for Haumea's classification is the long run is unclear. Is it an entirely new type of world? How many small bodies beyond Neptune have rings? At the moment, we have only a small sample of worlds to draw from for conclusions, and even less of those have been visited by spacecraft.

There's always more to explore.

The Planetary Society's Shoemaker NEO grant program is named after pioneering planetary geologist Gene Shoemaker. Grant winners make major contributions to planetary defense, helping to protect Earth from asteroid impacts. During the program's 20-year history, The Planetary Society has awarded more than $323,000 to astronomers from 16 countries on five continents. Learn more about the program here.