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Featured researches published by Ryan Allen.


The Astronomical Journal | 2004

The Size Distribution of Trans-Neptunian Bodies*

G. M. Bernstein; David E. Trilling; Ryan Allen; Michael E. Brown; Matthew J. Holman; Renu Malhotra

We search 0.02 deg 2 of the invariable plane for trans-Neptunian objects (TNOs) 25 AU or more distant using the Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) aboard the Hubble Space Telescope. With 22 ks per pointing, the search is more than 50% complete for m606W � 29:2. Three new objects are discovered, the faintest with mean magnitude m ¼ 28:3 (diameter � 25 km), which is 3 mag fainter than any previously well-measured solar system body. Each new discovery is verified with a follow-up 18 ks observation with the ACS, and the detection efficiency is verified with implanted objects. The three detections are a factor of � 25 less than would be expected under extrapolation of the power-law differential sky density for brighter objects, � (m) � dN=dmd� / 10 � m with � � 0:63. Analysis of the ACS data and recent TNO surveys from the literature reveals departures from this power law at both the bright and faint ends. Division of the TNO sample by distance and inclination into ‘‘classical Kuiper belt’’ (CKB) and ‘‘Excited’’ samples reveals that � (m) differs for the two populations at 96% confidence, and both samples show departures from power-law behavior. A double power-law � (m) adequately fits all data. Implications of these departures include the following: (1) The total mass of the ‘‘classical’’ Kuiper belt is � 0.010 M� , only a few times Pluto’s mass, and is predominantly in the form of � 100 km bodies (barring a secondary peak in the mass distribution at sub‐10 km sizes). The mass of Excited objects is perhaps a few times larger. (2) The Excited class has a shallower bright-end magnitude (and, presumably, size) distribution; the largest objects, including Pluto, make up tens of percent of the total mass whereas the largest CKB objects are only � 2% of its mass. (3) The derived size distributions predict that the largest Excited body should be roughly the mass of Pluto, and the largest CKB body should have mR � 20—hence, Pluto is feasibly considered to have originated from the same physical process as the Excited TNOs. (4) The observed deficit of small TNOs occurs in the size regime where present-day collisions are expected to be disruptive, suggesting extensive depletion by collisions. The Excited and CKB size distributions are qualitatively similar to some numerical models of growth and erosion, with both accretion and erosion appearing to have proceeded to more advanced stages in the Excited class than in the CKB. (5) The lack of detections of distant TNOs implies that if a mass of TNOs comparable to the CKB is present near the invariable plane beyond 50 AU, that distant population must be composed primarily of bodies smaller than � 40 km. (6) There are too few small CKB objects for this population to be the reservoir of Jupiter-family comet precursors without a significant upturn in the population at diameters under 20 km. With optimistic model parameters and extrapolations, the Excited population could be the source reservoir. Implications of these discoveries for the formation and evolution of the outer solar system are discussed.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2006

Discovery of a Low-Eccentricity, High-Inclination Kuiper Belt Object at 58 AU

Ryan Allen; Brett Gladman; J. J. Kavelaars; Jean-Marc Petit; Joel Wm. Parker; P. D. Nicholson

We report the discovery of the first trans-Neptunian object, designated 2004 XR190, with a low-eccentricity orbit beyond the 2 : 1 mean motion resonance. Fitting an orbit to 23 astrometric observations spread out over 12 months yields an orbit of a = 57.2 ± 0.4, e = 0.08 ± 0.04, and i = 466. All viable orbits have perihelia distances q > 49 AU. The very high orbital inclination of this extended scattered disk object might be explained by several models, but its existence again points to a large as-yet undiscovered population of trans-Neptunian objects with large orbital perihelia and inclination.


The Astronomical Journal | 2006

Erratum: “The Size Distribution of Trans-Neptunian Bodies” (AJ, 128, 1364 [2004])

G. M. Bernstein; David E. Trilling; Ryan Allen; Michael E. Brown; M. Holman; Renu Malhotra


The Astronomical Journal | 2006

Erratum: The size distribution of trans-Neptunian bodies (The Astronomical Journal (2004) 128 (1364))

G. M. Bernstein; David E. Trilling; Ryan Allen; Michael E. Brown; M. Holman; Renu Malhotra


Archive | 2002

Probing The Solar System's Outermost Frontier: The Future of Kuiper Belt Studies

William M. Grundy; Harold F. Levison; Joel Wm. Parker; Ryan Allen; L. C. Ball; John F. Cooper; Maria Cristina de Sanctis; Tony L. Farnham; Brett James Gladman; Joseph M. Hahn; Carl W. Hergenrother; J. J. Kavelaars; Harald Krueger; David Lien; Renu Malhotra; R. M. Mastrapa; Alice C. Quillen; Ralf Srama; J. A. Stansberry; G. Strazzulla; Richard J. Terrile; Chadwick Aaron Trujillo


Archive | 2000

The Outer Edge of the Solar System

Ryan Allen; G. M. Bernstein; Renu Malhotra


Archive | 2004

First Results of the CFHLS Kuiper Belt Survey

Ryan Allen; Brett James Gladman; J. J. Kavelaars; Joel Wm. Parker; Jean-Marc Petit


Archive | 2004

Natural Satellite Observations [675 Palomar]

Brett James Gladman; Ryan Allen; Matija Ćuk; Christa L. Van Laerhoven


Archive | 2003

First Results of the CFLS Ultrawide Survey

Ryan Allen; J. J. Kavelaars; Brett James Gladman; Joel Wm. Parker; J.-M. Petite; H. Scholl


Archive | 2003

The origin of short period comets

Renu Malhotra; Ryan Allen; G. M. Bernstein; Michael E. Brown; Matthew J. Holman; David E. Trilling

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G. M. Bernstein

University of Pennsylvania

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Michael E. Brown

California Institute of Technology

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Joel Wm. Parker

Southwest Research Institute

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Jean-Marc Petit

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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