Centaurs are minor planets that orbit between Jupiter and Neptune, their current or past orbits crossing those of the giant planets. It is estimated that there are around 44,000 centaurs with diameters larger than one kilometre.
Until recently it was thought that the four giants such as Saturn and Jupiter were the only ringed celestial bodies within our solar system.
However, in 2014 observations of stellar occultation, an event that occurs when light from a star is blocked from the observer by a celestial body, by multiple telescopes showed that rings exist around the centaur Chariklo.
The team from Kobe University in Japan began by estimating the probability that these centaurs passed close enough to the giant planets to be destroyed by their tidal pull.
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The study showed that about 10 per cent of centaurs would experience that level of close encounter.
Researchers used computer simulations to study the disruption caused by tidal pull when the centaurs passed close by the giant planets.
The outcome of such encounters was found to vary depending on parameters such as the initial spin of the passing centaur, the size of its core and the distance of its closest approach to a giant planet.
The simulations suggest that the existence of rings around centaurs would be much more common than previously thought.
It is highly likely that other centaurs with rings or small moons exist, awaiting discovery by future observations, researchers said.
The findings appear in the Astrophysical Journal Letters.