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Dive into the research topics where Warren B. Offutt is active.

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Featured researches published by Warren B. Offutt.


Nature | 1997

A new dynamical class of object in the outer Solar System

Jane X. Luu; Brian G. Marsden; David Jewitt; Chadwick Aaron Trujillo; Carl W. Hergenrother; Jun Chen; Warren B. Offutt

Some three dozen objects have now been discovered beyond the orbit of Neptune and classified as members of the Kuiper belt—a remnant population of icy planetesimals that failed to be incorporated into planets. At still greater distances is believed to lie the Oort cloud—a massive population of cometary objects distributed approximately in a sphere of characteristic dimension 50,000au(ref. 6). Here we report the discovery of an object, 1996TL66, that appears to be representative of a population of scattered bodies located between the Kuiper belt and the Oort cloud. 1996TL66has an orbital semimajor axis of 84au, and is in an extremely eccentric and highly inclined orbit (e = 0.58, i = 24°). With a red magnitude ∼20.9, it is the brightest trans-neptunian object yet found since Pluto and Charon. Its discovery suggests that the Kuiper belt extends substantially beyond the 30–50auregion sampled by previous surveys, and may contain much more mass than previously suspected.


Nature | 1998

Discovery of two distant irregular moons of Uranus

Brett Gladman; Philip D. Nicholson; Joseph A. Burns; Jj Kavelaars; B. G. Marsden; G. V. M. Williams; Warren B. Offutt

The systems of satellites and rings surrounding the giant planets in the Solar System have remarkably similar architectures. Closest to each planet are rings with associated moonlets, then larger ‘regular’ satellites on nearly circular orbits close to the planets equatorial plane, and finally one or more distant, small ‘irregular’ satellites on highly elliptical or inclined orbits. Hitherto, the only departure from this broad classification scheme was the satellite system around Uranus, in which no irregular satellites had been found. Here we report the discovery of two satellites orbiting Uranus at distances of several hundred planetary radii. These satellites have inclined, retrograde orbits of moderate eccentricity that clearly identify them as irregular. The satellites are extremely faint (apparent red magnitudes mR = 20.4 and 21.9), with estimated radii of only 60 and 30 km. Both moons are unusually red in colour, suggesting a link between these objects—which were presumably captured by Uranus early in the Solar Systems history—and other recently discovered bodies orbiting in the outer Solar System.


Archive | 1999

Results of Observational Campaigns Carried Out During the Impact of Lunar Prospector into a Permanently Shadowed Crater near the South Pole of the Moon

Edwin S. Barker; Carlos Allende Prieto; Tony L. Farnham; David B. Goldstein; R. Steven Nerem; Jan Austin; J.-Y. Shim; A. B. Storrs; Sharon A. Stern; Alan B. Binder; Thomas A. Bida; Thomas J. Morgan; Susan M. Larson; Ann L. Sprague; D. M. Hunten; Robert J. Hill; Richard W. H. Kozlowski; Bernd Ludwig; S. Rubinson; Jeffrey Baumgardner; Michael Mendillo; June Wilson; Joei Wroten; Stefano Verani; Chris R. Benn; Ramon J. Garcia Lopez; E. M. Gates; D. L. Talent; A. Alday; A. Pozar


Archive | 1998

The discovery of two irregular Uranian satellites

Philip D. Nicholson; Joseph A. Burns; Brett James Gladman; J. J. Kavelaars; B. G. Marsden; G. V. M. Williams; Kaare Aksnes; Warren B. Offutt


Archive | 2000

Pinning Down the Orbits of Transneptunian Objects

Brian G. Marsden; Warren B. Offutt


Archive | 1998

Comet P/1939 TN = 1998 WG22 (Vaisala-Oterma)

Y. Vaisala; Liisi Oterma; Satoshi Nakano; D. D. Balam; Warren B. Offutt; Milos Tichy; B. G. Marsden


Archive | 1998

Comet C/1998 M3

Jeffrey A. Larsen; M. Blythe; F. Shelly; M. Bezpalko; Joseph Scott Stuart; Herbert E. M. Viggh; Warren B. Offutt; B. G. Marsden


Archive | 1998

Comet C/1998 M1 (Linear)

M. Tichy; Z. Moravec; A. Nakamura; A. Sugie; G. J. Garradd; F. B. Zoltowski; L. Sarounova; Carl W. Hergenrother; M. Blythe; F. Shelly; M. Bezpalko; Joseph Scott Stuart; Herbert E. M. Viggh; Warren B. Offutt; T. Puckett; Masamichi Yamanishi; Akira Miyamoto; M. Aimoto; Takaaki Oribe; B. G. Marsden


Archive | 1998

Comet C/1998 M2 (Linear)

J. Ticha; M. Tichy; Z. Moravec; L. Tesi; A. Boattini; G. Forti; M. Nicolini; Maria Cristina Facchini; A. Salmaso; S. Sposetti; Atsuo Asami; Hirotake Abe; A. Sugie; F. B. Zoltowski; J.-C. Merlin; V. S. Casulli; D. D. Balam; M. Blythe; F. Shelly; M. Bezpalko; Joseph Scott Stuart; Herbert E. M. Viggh; R. Sayer; Warren B. Offutt; Robert A. Koff; T. Puckett; P. R. Holvorcem; Toshinori Kojima; B. G. Marsden


Archive | 1998

Comet C/1998 M3 (Larsen)

J. Ticha; M. Tichy; Z. Moravec; F. B. Zoltowski; J.-C. Merlin; P. Pravec; James Monie Bauer; Karen J. Meech; D. D. Balam; Jeffrey A. Larsen; J. V. Scotti; M. Blythe; F. Shelly; M. Bezpalko; Joseph Scott Stuart; Herbert E. M. Viggh; R. Sayer; Warren B. Offutt; G. Pate; Dustin J. Penn; B. G. Marsden

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F. Shelly

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Herbert E. M. Viggh

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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M. Bezpalko

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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D. D. Balam

University of Victoria

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J. Ticha

Goddard Space Flight Center

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R. Sayer

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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G. V. M. Williams

Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory

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