Until now, rings have been detected in the Solar System exclusively around
the four giant planets. Here we report the discovery of the first minor-body
ring system around the Centaur object (10199) Chariklo, a body with equivalent
radius 124$\pm$9 km. A multi-chord stellar occultation revealed the presence of
two dense rings around Chariklo, with widths of about 7 km and 3 km, optical
depths 0.4 and 0.06, and orbital radii 391 and 405 km, respectively. The
present orientation of the ring is consistent with an edge-on geometry in 2008,
thus providing a simple explanation for the dimming of Chariklo's system
between 1997 and 2008, and for the gradual disappearance of ice and other
absorption features in its spectrum over the same period. This implies that the
rings are partially composed of water ice. These rings may be the remnants of a
debris disk, which were possibly confined by embedded kilometre-sized
satellites
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