Berliner Boersenzeitung - The hunt for mysterious 'Planet Nine' offers up a surprise

EUR -
AED 4.343084
AFN 77.459286
ALL 96.579317
AMD 443.005126
ANG 2.116942
AOA 1084.441581
ARS 1696.432015
AUD 1.709698
AWG 2.130448
AZN 2.007214
BAM 1.955381
BBD 2.363494
BDT 143.549257
BGN 1.986018
BHD 0.442405
BIF 3475.455694
BMD 1.182597
BND 1.500979
BOB 8.109263
BRL 6.25641
BSD 1.173449
BTN 107.718931
BWP 16.277514
BYN 3.322089
BYR 23178.895993
BZD 2.360095
CAD 1.622777
CDF 2578.061108
CHF 0.92885
CLF 0.026073
CLP 1029.497459
CNY 8.246959
CNH 8.220248
COP 4228.69438
CRC 580.775621
CUC 1.182597
CUP 31.338813
CVE 110.241391
CZK 24.243347
DJF 208.975246
DKK 7.466902
DOP 73.934166
DZD 153.1562
EGP 55.657722
ERN 17.738951
ETB 182.792653
FJD 2.661203
FKP 0.866824
GBP 0.867324
GEL 3.181352
GGP 0.866824
GHS 12.791261
GIP 0.866824
GMD 86.329097
GNF 10278.798686
GTQ 9.007071
GYD 245.51742
HKD 9.221356
HNL 30.954371
HRK 7.533375
HTG 153.907039
HUF 381.677781
IDR 19840.957581
ILS 3.707263
IMP 0.866824
INR 108.317628
IQD 1537.370756
IRR 49816.887621
ISK 145.778454
JEP 0.866824
JMD 184.72044
JOD 0.838427
JPY 184.148094
KES 151.257607
KGS 103.41761
KHR 4722.988522
KMF 496.691175
KPW 1064.460543
KRW 1710.401436
KWD 0.362346
KYD 0.977991
KZT 590.743486
LAK 25359.568979
LBP 105086.794547
LKR 363.552141
LRD 217.093507
LSL 18.940644
LTL 3.491901
LVL 0.715341
LYD 7.466401
MAD 10.748998
MDL 19.972723
MGA 5308.863051
MKD 61.616804
MMK 2482.620837
MNT 4215.294549
MOP 9.425381
MRU 46.916952
MUR 54.293134
MVR 18.271037
MWK 2034.864212
MXN 20.593728
MYR 4.736893
MZN 75.57967
NAD 18.940644
NGN 1680.541045
NIO 43.180752
NOK 11.543747
NPR 172.350089
NZD 1.990578
OMR 0.454253
PAB 1.173549
PEN 3.936857
PGK 5.018925
PHP 69.734175
PKR 328.344981
PLN 4.206148
PYG 7847.319413
QAR 4.278384
RON 5.10168
RSD 117.374863
RUB 88.771554
RWF 1711.533457
SAR 4.43348
SBD 9.606956
SCR 16.85639
SDG 711.331576
SEK 10.578186
SGD 1.50509
SHP 0.887254
SLE 28.85216
SLL 24798.461354
SOS 669.456629
SRD 45.081813
STD 24477.364748
STN 24.494754
SVC 10.267801
SYP 13079.017154
SZL 18.935945
THB 36.920482
TJS 10.97225
TMT 4.139089
TND 3.416268
TOP 2.847409
TRY 51.247241
TTD 7.971293
TWD 37.116742
TZS 3004.156628
UAH 50.599464
UGX 4148.111638
USD 1.182597
UYU 44.440483
UZS 14242.949721
VES 416.587929
VND 31037.251293
VUV 141.325014
WST 3.258752
XAF 655.81655
XAG 0.011483
XAU 0.000237
XCD 3.196027
XCG 2.114947
XDR 0.815625
XOF 655.81655
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.816102
ZAR 19.042528
ZMK 10644.788392
ZMW 23.02207
ZWL 380.795666
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    13.68

    +0.07%

  • BCC

    -1.1800

    84.33

    -1.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0900

    24.13

    +0.37%

  • NGG

    1.3200

    81.5

    +1.62%

  • GSK

    0.5000

    49.15

    +1.02%

  • BCE

    0.4900

    25.2

    +1.94%

  • RBGPF

    -0.8100

    83.23

    -0.97%

  • CMSC

    0.1000

    23.75

    +0.42%

  • RIO

    3.1300

    90.43

    +3.46%

  • RELX

    0.0600

    39.9

    +0.15%

  • RYCEF

    0.3000

    17.12

    +1.75%

  • VOD

    0.2300

    14.17

    +1.62%

  • BTI

    0.9400

    59.16

    +1.59%

  • BP

    1.1000

    36.53

    +3.01%

  • AZN

    1.2600

    92.95

    +1.36%

The hunt for mysterious 'Planet Nine' offers up a surprise
The hunt for mysterious 'Planet Nine' offers up a surprise / Photo: HO - CALTECH/AFP/File

The hunt for mysterious 'Planet Nine' offers up a surprise

It's an evocative idea that has long bedevilled scientists: a huge and mysterious planet is lurking in the darkness at the edge of our solar system, evading all our efforts to spot it.

Text size:

Some astronomers say the strange, clustered orbits of icy rocks beyond Neptune indicate that something big is out there, which they have dubbed Planet Nine.

Now, a US-based trio hunting this elusive world has instead stumbled on what appears to be a new dwarf planet in the solar system's outer reaches.

And the existence of this new kid on the block could challenge the Planet Nine theory, the researchers have calculated.

Named 2017 OF201, the new object is roughly 700 kilometres (430 miles) across according to a preprint study, which has not been peer-reviewed, published online last week.

That makes it three times smaller than Pluto.

But that is still big enough to be considered a dwarf planet, lead study author Sihao Cheng of New Jersey's Institute for Advanced Study told AFP.

- Distant traveller -

The object is currently three times farther away from Earth than Neptune.

And its extremely elongated orbit swings out more than 1,600 times the distance between the Earth and the Sun, taking it into the ring of icy rocks around the solar system called the Oort cloud.

It goes so far out, it could have passed by stars other than our Sun in the past, Cheng said.

During its 25,000-year orbit, the object is only close enough to Earth to be observed around 0.5 percent of the time, which is roughly a century.

"It's already getting fainter and fainter," Cheng said.

The discovery suggests "there are many hundreds of similar things on similar orbits" in the Kuiper Belt beyond Neptune, Cheng said.

After taking a risk spending more than half a year sorting through a difficult dataset in search of Planet Nine, Cheng said he was "lucky" to have found anything at all.

The researchers are requesting time to point the James Webb, Hubble and ALMA telescopes at their discovery.

But Sam Deen, a 23-year-old amateur astronomer from California, has already been able to track the dwarf planet candidate through old datasets.

"OF201 is, in my opinion, probably one of the most interesting discoveries in the outer solar system in the last decade," Deen told AFP.

- What about Planet Nine? -

The icy rocks discovered in the Kuiper belt tend to have a clustered orbit going in a particular direction.

Two decades ago, astronomers proposed this was due to the gravitational pull of a world up to 10 times larger than Earth, naming it Planet Nine and kicking off a debate that has rumbled since.

It is also sometimes called Planet X, a name proposed for a hypothetical world beyond Neptune more than a century ago.

Back in 1930, astronomers were searching for Planet X when they discovered Pluto, which became our solar system's ninth planet.

But Pluto turned out to be too tiny -- it is smaller than the Moon -- and was demoted to dwarf planet status in 2006.

There are now four other officially recognised dwarf planets, and Cheng believes 2017 OF201 could join their ranks.

When the researchers modelled its orbit, they found it did not follow the clustered trend of similar objects.

This could pose a problem for the Planet Nine theory, but Cheng emphasised more data is needed.

Samantha Lawler of Canada's University of Regina told AFP that this "great discovery" and others like it mean that "the original argument for Planet Nine is getting weaker and weaker".

The Vera Rubin Observatory, which is scheduled to go online in Chile this year, is expected to shed light on this mystery, one way or another.

Deen said it was discouraging that no sign of Planet Nine has been found so far, but with Vera Rubin "on the horizon I don't think we'll have to wonder about its existence for much longer".

For Cheng, he still hopes that this huge planet is out there somewhere.

"We're in an era when big telescopes can see almost to the edge of the universe," he said.

But what is in our "backyard" still largely remains unknown, he added.

(P.Werner--BBZ)