TY - JOUR
T1 - A JWST/DiSCo-TNOs portrait of the primordial Solar System through its trans-Neptunian objects
AU - Pinilla-Alonso, Noemí
AU - Brunetto, Rosario
AU - De Prá, Mário N.
AU - Holler, Bryan J.
AU - Hénault, Elsa
AU - Feliciano, Ana Carolina de Souza
AU - Lorenzi, Vania
AU - Pendleton, Yvonne J.
AU - Cruikshank, Dale P.
AU - Müller, Thomas G.
AU - Stansberry, John A.
AU - Emery, Joshua P.
AU - Schambeau, Charles A.
AU - Licandro, Javier
AU - Harvison, Brittany
AU - McClure, Lucas
AU - Guilbert-Lepoutre, Aurélie
AU - Peixinho, Nuno
AU - Bannister, Michele T.
AU - Wong, Ian
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited 2024.
PY - 2025/2
Y1 - 2025/2
N2 - The detection of molecules on the coldest and outermost objects in our Solar System has long been limited by the terrestrial atmosphere and sensitivity of the available instrumentation. However, near-infrared observations by the James Webb Space Telescope have provided an unprecedented view of the molecular diversity on the surfaces of trans-Neptunian objects (TNOs). Using the low spectral resolution PRISM mode on the near-infrared spectrograph as part of the Cycle 1 large programme, ‘Discovering the Surface Composition of trans-Neptunian objects’, we report the detection of several molecular ices throughout the TNO population, including H2O, CO2, 13CO2, CO, CH3OH and complex molecules and refractory materials containing aliphatic C–H, C≡N, O–H and N–H bonds. As a result of the imprint that these molecules leave on the spectra, three main compositional groups consistently emerge from multiple independent cluster analyses. Our results unlock the long-standing question of the interpretation of colour diversity, providing the much-needed compositional information. The marked separation of the three spectral clusters reveals sharp variations in the surface molecular constituents. The C/O and (CH + NH)/(C + O) ratios on the surface of TNOs are the primary indicators of the spectral differences among the three TNO compositional groups observed. We propose that these objects are fossil remnants of icy planetesimals, and that the three compositional groups provide a picture of the ice retention lines in the Solar System that likely occurred in the outer protoplanetary disk, possibly just before a major planetary migration.
AB - The detection of molecules on the coldest and outermost objects in our Solar System has long been limited by the terrestrial atmosphere and sensitivity of the available instrumentation. However, near-infrared observations by the James Webb Space Telescope have provided an unprecedented view of the molecular diversity on the surfaces of trans-Neptunian objects (TNOs). Using the low spectral resolution PRISM mode on the near-infrared spectrograph as part of the Cycle 1 large programme, ‘Discovering the Surface Composition of trans-Neptunian objects’, we report the detection of several molecular ices throughout the TNO population, including H2O, CO2, 13CO2, CO, CH3OH and complex molecules and refractory materials containing aliphatic C–H, C≡N, O–H and N–H bonds. As a result of the imprint that these molecules leave on the spectra, three main compositional groups consistently emerge from multiple independent cluster analyses. Our results unlock the long-standing question of the interpretation of colour diversity, providing the much-needed compositional information. The marked separation of the three spectral clusters reveals sharp variations in the surface molecular constituents. The C/O and (CH + NH)/(C + O) ratios on the surface of TNOs are the primary indicators of the spectral differences among the three TNO compositional groups observed. We propose that these objects are fossil remnants of icy planetesimals, and that the three compositional groups provide a picture of the ice retention lines in the Solar System that likely occurred in the outer protoplanetary disk, possibly just before a major planetary migration.
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U2 - 10.1038/s41550-024-02433-2
DO - 10.1038/s41550-024-02433-2
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85212526025
SN - 2397-3366
VL - 9
SP - 230
EP - 244
JO - Nature Astronomy
JF - Nature Astronomy
IS - 2
ER -