Chiron and Saturn

General physics and astronomy discussions not directly related to Celestia
Topic author
Apollo7
Posts: 112
Joined: 03.05.2003
Age: 46
With us: 21 years 7 months
Location: Houston, TX

Chiron and Saturn

Post #1by Apollo7 » 17.08.2004, 04:34

THis is an issue that has been plaguing me for a while now and you guys generally know your stuff. I've read on numerous occasions a rough time table for a "close approach" of Saturn by the Asteroid/Comet 2060 Chiron. Usually this theory is prefaced by "might" or "could possibly" so I'm not even sure if its set in stone, but I've heard time frames like 10,000 and 20,000 years in the future. Is there any validity to this theory and if so could Celestia model the point at which this supposed "close encounter" will occur?
"May Fortune Favor the Foolish" - James T. Kirk

tony873004
Posts: 132
Joined: 07.12.2003
With us: 21 years
Location: San Francisco http://www.gravitysimulator.com

Post #2by tony873004 » 17.08.2004, 07:46

Chiron will pass 203,000,000 from Saturn in 2242, 177,000,000 in 2488, & 167,000,000 in 2833. I don't think Chiron's orbit is known well enough to predict much further into the future. All these passes alter Chiron's orbit noticably. Chiron even becomes both a Uranus-crosser and a Saturn-crosser at the same time.

Using JPL's Horizons data to set up the solar system in 2004 yields this simulation showing Chiron's path passing just 62 million kilometers from Saturn in 8323. But it probably contains such a large margin of error due to the time elapsed as to render it useless.
Image


Return to “Physics and Astronomy”