Author Topic: Dwarf planet discovery hints at a hidden Super Earth in solar system  (Read 296729 times)

Offline Star One

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« Last Edit: 08/14/2016 01:45 pm by Chris Bergin »

Offline MP99

ISTR that Pluto was demoted because it doesn't dominate it's orbit gravitationally (ISTR the Hill sphere came into it).

If this postulated object is "shepherding" Sedna and 2012 VP113, does that mean that it might fit within the definition of "planet" rather than "dwarf planet"?

Cheers, Martin

Offline clongton

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ISTR that Pluto was demoted because it doesn't dominate it's orbit gravitationally (ISTR the Hill sphere came into it).

If this postulated object is "shepherding" Sedna and 2012 VP113, does that mean that it might fit within the definition of "planet" rather than "dwarf planet"?

Cheers, Martin

It's possible. For its gravitational effect to be large enough to shepherd these bodies like this it would need to be much larger, possibly Earth size or bigger. I doubt a dwarf planet would have that extensive an influence.
« Last Edit: 03/26/2014 06:53 pm by clongton »
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Offline Star One

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ISTR that Pluto was demoted because it doesn't dominate it's orbit gravitationally (ISTR the Hill sphere came into it).

If this postulated object is "shepherding" Sedna and 2012 VP113, does that mean that it might fit within the definition of "planet" rather than "dwarf planet"?

Cheers, Martin

It's possible. For its gravitational effect to be large enough to shepherd these bodies like this it would need to be much larger, possibly Earth size or bigger. I doubt a dwarf planet would have that extensive an influence.

Super Earth of the title suggests a planet several times the size of the Earth, but would a body that large be needed to produce these effects?

Be funny if the textbooks had to be revised again back to nine planets.

Offline Bubbinski

I remember when Sedna was discovered, and 10 years later we've found this new object that orbits even further out. 

If this leads to a "super-Earth" it could be our first glimpse of this kind of planet, there have been so many found orbiting other stars but not ours.
I'll even excitedly look forward to "flags and footprints" and suborbital missions. Just fly...somewhere.

Offline RanulfC

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Be funny if the textbooks had to be revised again back to nine planets.

Just name it "Pluto" and ignore the last fact we'd name a "dwarf" planet intead of the "right" one... Think of the cost savings by going back to older text books :)

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Offline Star One

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Be funny if the textbooks had to be revised again back to nine planets.

Just name it "Pluto" and ignore the last fact we'd name a "dwarf" planet intead of the "right" one... Think of the cost savings by going back to older text books :)

Randy

Good answer:)

Imagine trying to get a craft out to study it, you would have to invent some exotic technologies for that task.

Offline Ben the Space Brit

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Complex multiple planet with its companions? Rather than a 'primary' and 'satellites', they could be close enough in mass and location to be co-rotational.
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Offline Nomadd

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 I keep seeing news reports referring to this as a "Dwarf planet". It's smaller than Vesta and doesn't seem likely to be spherical, so how is it a Dwarf?
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Offline Blackstar

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I remember when Sedna was discovered, and 10 years later we've found this new object that orbits even further out. 


The Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST) is under construction right now. You can Google it. When that becomes operational, you can expect the number of discoveries of these kinds of objects to increase quite a bit. As you can guess from the name, the point is that the LSST does a survey, meaning that it looks at a relatively wide bit of the sky. That's how you find small, faint moving objects. It is much harder to do with telescopes that have a very narrow field of view, because the object might be right outside of your field of view and you'll miss it.

Offline Blackstar

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This is a pretty neat article that includes a great discussion of "weirdest things we have discovered in the solar system."

http://phenomena.nationalgeographic.com/2014/03/27/solar-system-surprises/


Offline go4mars

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I keep seeing news reports referring to this as a "Dwarf planet". It's smaller than Vesta and doesn't seem likely to be spherical, so how is it a Dwarf?
It means the planet is inhabited by Dwarf's.  Just to clarify.  :)
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Offline Star One

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I remember when Sedna was discovered, and 10 years later we've found this new object that orbits even further out. 


The Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST) is under construction right now. You can Google it. When that becomes operational, you can expect the number of discoveries of these kinds of objects to increase quite a bit. As you can guess from the name, the point is that the LSST does a survey, meaning that it looks at a relatively wide bit of the sky. That's how you find small, faint moving objects. It is much harder to do with telescopes that have a very narrow field of view, because the object might be right outside of your field of view and you'll miss it.

The LSST is covered in this article about the discovery.

http://www.astronomynow.com/news/n1403/27oortcloud/#.UzRzfycgGSM

It mentions that it may hopefully be able to discover the larger shepherding body if it exists.
« Last Edit: 03/27/2014 06:02 pm by Star One »

Offline go4mars

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Nibiru chatter will grow louder. 
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Offline Star One

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Quote
The monsters are multiplying. Just months after astronomers announced hints of a giant "Planet X" lurking beyond Pluto, a team in Spain says there may actually be two supersized planets hiding in the outer reaches of our solar system.

When potential dwarf planet 2012 VP113 was discovered in March, it joined a handful of unusual rocky objects known to reside beyond the orbit of Pluto. These small objects have curiously aligned orbits, which hints that an unseen planet even further out is influencing their behaviour. Scientists calculated that this world would be about 10 times the mass of Earth and would orbit at roughly 250 times Earth's distance from the sun.

Now Carlos and Raul de la Fuente Marcos at the Complutense University of Madrid in Spain have taken another look at these distant bodies. As well as confirming their bizarre orbital alignment, the pair found additional puzzling patterns. Small groups of the objects have very similar orbital paths. Because they are not massive enough to be tugging on each other, the researchers think the objects are being "shepherded" by a larger object in a pattern known as orbital resonance.

http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn25711-two-giant-planets-may-cruise-unseen-beyond-pluto.html?utm_source=NSNS&utm_medium=SOC&utm_campaign=hoot&cmpid=SOC%7CNSNS%7C2013-GLOBAL-hoot#.U52wzIm9K0d

Here is the original paper.

http://arxiv.org/abs/1406.0715
« Last Edit: 06/17/2014 04:28 pm by Star One »

Offline Star One

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New article on this, speculating that if there is a planet out there it could be an extrasolar planet that's been captured by Uranus or Neptune because of the difficulty of forming a planet natively at that distance from the Sun.

https://www.sciencenews.org/article/distant-planet-may-lurk-far-beyond-neptune?mode=magazine&context=189396

Offline Ben the Space Brit

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There is also the possibility that, as seems to be happening in the Fomalhaut system right now, the orbital distances of several major planets could have changed several times before re-stabilising. This would allow for large objects to be thrown out of the middle solar system (as I think of the area between Jupiter and Neptune's orbits) out into the Kuiper Belt and beyond.
« Last Edit: 11/30/2014 01:35 pm by Ben the Space Brit »
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Offline NovaSilisko

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There is also the possibility that, as seems to be happening in the Fomalhaut system right now, the orbital distances of several major planets could have changed several times before re-stabilising. This would allow for large objects to be thrown out of the middle solar system (as I think of the area between Jupiter and Neptune's orbits) out into the Kuiper Belt and beyond.

That and the idea of them having been perturbed a long long time ago by other stars in a local stellar birth cluster are probably the best solutions.

Still, I can dream of Planet X, as have so many before.

Offline mheney

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Actually, Planet IX, ever since that whole Pluto thing ... ;)

Offline NovaSilisko

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Actually, Planet IX, ever since that whole Pluto thing ... ;)

IX and X then   :P

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