There might be a ninth planet in the solar
system after all — and it is not Pluto, New York Times is reporting.
Two
astronomers reported on Wednesday that they had compelling signs of something
bigger and farther away — something that would definitely satisfy the current
definition of a planet, where Pluto falls short.
“We are
pretty sure there’s one out there,” said Michael E. Brown, a
professor of planetary astronomy at the California Institute of Technology.
What
Dr. Brown and a fellow Caltech professor, Konstantin Batygin, have not done is actually
find that planet, so it would be premature to revisemnemonics of the planets just yet.
Rather,
in a paper published Wednesday in The Astronomical Journal, Dr. Brown and Dr. Batygin lay out a
detailed circumstantial argument for the planet’s existence in what astronomers
have observed — a half-dozen small bodies in distant, highly elliptical orbits.
A ninth
planet could be gravitationally herding them into these orbits.
For the
calculations to work, the planet would be quite large — at least as big as Earth, and likely much bigger — a mini-Neptune with a
thick atmosphere around a rocky core, with perhaps 10 times the mass of Earth.
It
would dwarf Pluto, at about 4,500 times its mass.
Pluto,
at its most distant, is 4.6 billion miles from the sun. The potential ninth
planet, at its closest, would be about 20 billion miles away; at its farthest,
it could be 100 billion miles away. It would take from 10,000 to 20,000 years
to complete one orbit around the sun.
“We
have pretty good constraints on its orbit,” Dr. Brown said. “What we don’t know
is where it is in its orbit, which is too bad.”
Alessandro
Morbidelli of the Côte d’Azur Observatory in France, an expert in dynamics of
the solar system, said he was convinced. “I think the chase is now on to find
this planet,” he said.
This
would be the second time that Dr. Brown has upended the map of the solar
system. In January 2005, he discovered a Pluto-size
object, now known as Eris, in the ring of icy debris beyond Neptune
known as the Kuiper belt.
A year
and a half later, the International Astronomical Union placed Pluto in a new category,
“dwarf planet,” because
it had not “cleared the neighborhood around its orbit.”
In the
view of the astronomical union, a full-fledged planet must be, in essence, the
gravitational bully of its orbit, and Pluto was not.
The
first indication of a hidden planet beyond Pluto had come a couple years
earlier. The Kuiper belt extends outward from Neptune’s orbit, about 2.8
billion miles from the sun, to a bit less than twice Neptune’s orbit, about
five billion miles.
Beyond
that, astronomers expected, was by and large empty space.
Thus
they were surprised when Dr. Brown and two colleagues spotted a 600-mile-wide
icy world that
not only was beyond the Kuiper belt, at a distance of eight billion miles, but
remained well outside the Kuiper belt even at the closest point in its orbit.
No one
could easily explain how the object, which Dr. Brown named Sedna, got there. It
was too far out to have been flung by the gravitational slings of big planets
like Jupiter and too
close to have been nudged by the gravitational tides of the Milky Way.
The
hope was that the discovery of more Sedna-like worlds would provide additional
clues.
Instead,
astronomers looked and found nothing, deepening the mystery.
Finally,
in 2014, Chadwick Trujillo, who had worked with Dr. Brown on the Sedna
discovery, and Scott S. Sheppard, an astronomer at the Carnegie Institution for
Science in Washington, reported a smaller object, designated 2012 VP113, in a
Sedna-like orbit, always remaining beyond the Kuiper belt.
Dr.
Trujillo and Dr. Sheppard noted that several Kuiper belt objects had some
similar orbital characteristics, and they laid out the possibility of a planet
disturbing the orbits of these objects. “I wasn’t sure,” Dr. Trujillo said. “It
was the best explanation we could come up with.”
But the
particulars of their proposed planet did not explain what was in the sky, Dr.
Brown said.
“The
theorists didn’t really take it seriously,” he said. “They figured it was all
some observational effect. The observers didn’t take it seriously, because they
figured it was all some theoretical thing they couldn’t understand.”
Still,
the peculiarities of the orbits appeared genuine. “It was really clear from
their data that observationally something was happening, and it demanded some
sort of explanation,” Dr. Brown said.
Dr.
Brown said he walked down the hall to Dr. Batygin’s office, and “the two of us
sat down and beat our heads against the wall for the last two years.”
First,
they focused on the six objects in stable orbits and disregarded objects that
had been recently flung out by Neptune to eventually depart the solar system.
That
made the picture clearer.
“What
we realized is the story is much more simple and more fundamental,” Dr. Batygin
said. “They all point into the same overall direction. All in same quadrant.
This is in stark contrast with the rest of the Kuiper belt.”
Besides
the long odds of this alignment being coincidental, Dr. Batygin said, this
pattern would not last indefinitely, dispersing over a few hundred million
years — a short time compared to the 4.5 billion-year age of the solar system.
“We’re
not observing a relic of a perturbation of the past,” he said.
That
argued for something else, something bigger, that is currently guiding Sedna
and the others.
Dr.
Batygin, a theorist, tried placing a planet among the six objects. That did
scatter some of the Kuiper belt objects, but the orbits were not sufficiently
eccentric.
Then he
examined what would happen if a ninth planet were looping outward in a
direction opposite to Sedna and the others. That, Dr. Batygin said, gave “a
beautiful match to the real data.”
The
computer simulations showed that the planet swept up the Kuiper belt objects
and placed them only temporarily in the elliptical orbits. Come back in half a
billion years, Dr. Brown said, and Sedna will be back in the Kuiper belt, while
other Kuiper belt objects will have been swept into similar elliptical orbits.
Another
strange result in the simulations: A few Kuiper belt objects were knocked into
orbits perpendicular to the plane of planetary orbits. Dr. Brown remembered
that five objects had been found in perpendicular orbits.
“They’re
exactly where we predicted them to be,” Dr. Brown said. “That’s when my jaw hit
my floor. I think this is actually right.”
Dr.
Trujillo said the new paper made a much more convincing argument for another
planet than his own did. “We’re pleasantly surprised that someone has really
done a much better job than we did,” he said.
Dr.
Morbidelli agreed. “I think they’re onto something real,” he said. “I would bet
money. I would bet 10,000 bucks.”
Dr.
Morbidelli said that the ninth planet could easily be the core of a gas giant
that started forming in the early years of the solar system; a close pass to
Jupiter could have flung it out. In those days, the sun was packed in a dense
cluster of stars, and the gravity of those neighbors could have slowed the
planet and prevented it from escaping the solar system.
Dr.
Brown said he began searching for the planet a year ago, and he thought he
would be able to find it within five years — perhaps sooner, with luck. Now it
is likely that other astronomers will scan that swath of the sky.
If the
planet exists, it would easily meet the International Astronomical Union’s
requirements, Dr. Brown said.
“There
are some truly dominant bodies in the solar system and they are pushing around
everything else,” Dr. Brown said. “This is what we mean when we say planet.”
Source:New York Times

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