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Other Solar System Objects: Solar System UPSC

🪨 Asteroids and the Asteroid Belt – The Debris Zone Between Mars and Jupiter

  • Imagine a construction site of the solar system where some bricks never formed into a full building. Those are asteroids — leftover rocky and metallic debris.
  • They orbit the Sun in a zone called the Asteroid Belt, located between Mars and Jupiter (~2.3 to 3.3 AU).
  • Jupiter’s massive gravity disrupted the coalescence of these fragments into a planet.

🔹 Ceres — The Special One:

  • At 2.77 AU, Ceres is the largest asteroid, almost 946 km in diameter.
  • So massive that it’s pulled into a spherical shape by its own gravity.
  • Hence, it is not just an asteroid, but also:
    • A Protoplanet
    • A Dwarf Planet
    • A Small Solar System Body (a class of objects smaller than planets and dwarf planets)

❄️ Kuiper Belt, Pluto & Charon — The Cold Storage Beyond Neptune

  • Located beyond Neptune, the Kuiper Belt (30–50 AU) is like the asteroid belt’s icy cousin.
  • It contains icy bodies and dwarf planets like Pluto and Eris.

🔹 Pluto:

  • Discovered in 1930; was once the ninth planet.
  • Demoted in 2006 by the International Astronomical Union (IAU).

🔸 Why Pluto was demoted:

IAU defined a planet as one that:

  1. Orbits the Sun
  2. Has enough mass to be nearly round (hydrostatic equilibrium)
  3. Is not a moon
  4. Has cleared its orbit of debris

Pluto fails the 4th criterion, as many similar-sized bodies like Eris are found in its orbital zone.

➡️ Hence, Pluto, Eris, and Ceres are now called Dwarf Planets.

🔹 Charon:

  • Pluto’s largest moon
  • So large relative to Pluto that some consider the Pluto–Charon system a binary dwarf planet system

☄️ Comets — Icy Visitors with Glowing Tails

“Comets are like dirty snowballs with glowing personalities.”

  • Made of ice, gas, rock, and dust (water, ammonia, methane, CO₂)
  • Highly elliptical orbits → far from the Sun, but occasionally enter inner solar system

🔸 Where they come from:

  • Short-period comets: Originate in the Kuiper Belt (orbit: 100s of years)
  • Long-period comets: Originate in the Oort Cloud (orbit: 1000s of years)

Oort Cloud: A giant icy shell surrounding the solar system (5,000 to 100,000 AU)

🔸 When near the Sun:

  • Solar wind heats the comet
  • Ice sublimates (turns to gas) → forms coma (glowing atmosphere) and a tail
  • Example: Halley’s Comet → visits Earth every 76 years (last seen: 1986)

🌠 Meteoroids, Meteors & Meteorites — The Shooting Stars

Let’s break down this confusing trio with a simple story:

TermWhat It Means
MeteoroidA space rock floating in space
MeteorThe flash of light seen when it enters Earth’s atmosphere (burns due to friction) – also called a shooting star
MeteoriteThe part of the meteoroid that survives the fall and hits Earth

🔸 Interesting Facts:

  • Meteors generally burn up in the mesosphere (~200 km above Earth)
  • If a meteorite hits the ground, it can create a crater

🌋 Famous Meteor Craters:

LocationDetails
Arizona, USALargest visible meteor crater (~1.3 km wide), formed ~10,000 years ago
Chicxulub Crater, MexicoCaused mass extinction (~65 million years ago), including dinosaurs
IndiaLonar Lake (Maharashtra) – 1.8 km wide; now a Ramsar Site
Dhala Crater (M.P.) – 14 km wide
Ramgarh Crater (Rajasthan) – 3.5 km; potential meteorite crater

🎯 Deepen Your Understanding: Related Articles for You!

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