Everything about Hypothetical Trans-neptunian Planets totally explained
Since the discovery of the eighth planet
Neptune in
1846, there has been considerable speculation that another planet might exist beyond the orbit of Neptune. In the years since then, various discovered objects and hypothesized bodies from the
trans-Neptunian region have been identified as the "
ninth planet" or "
tenth planet'".
Nomenclature
Although historical changes in the enumeration of planets (particularly whether or not to count
Ceres or other asteroids as planets) would have variously made Jupiter or Neptune the "ninth planet", the terms "ninth planet" and "tenth planet" are generally used to refer to hypothetical trans-Neptunian planets.
Pluto's status as a planet from 1930 to 2006 made "tenth planet" the predominant term for such objects during this period, while "ninth planet" has been more technically correct since then.
History
1846 to 1930: Search for a ninth planet
The
Planet X hypothesis, first put forth by
Percival Lowell in the late 19th century, stated that there was a fifth
gas giant beyond the orbit of Neptune, providing the most common basis for the existence of a ninth planet. The X stands for
unknown, rather than the Roman numeral for 10 — when Lowell postulated Planet X, Pluto (counted as ninth planet until 2006) hadn't been discovered. Planet X was intended to explain perceived anomalies in the orbits of the outer planets. More accurate measurements taken by
space probes such as
Voyager 2 caused the anomalies to vanish without the need for an extra planet, and the hypothesis was discredited in the 1990s.
1930 to 2006: Search for a tenth planet
Pluto, which was found during the search for Planet X, was counted as the ninth planet from shortly after its
1930 discovery until
August 24,
2006, when it was reclassified by the
IAU as a
dwarf planet.
From the discovery of
Pluto in 1930 to the establishment of a formal
definition of planet in
2006, the existence of a
tenth planet was speculated by astronomers and the general public alike. Tenth planets frequently appeared in fiction, and media reports of new
trans-Neptunian object (TNO) discoveries used the label with some frequency.
With the discovery of the
Kuiper belt, the astronomical community began instead to increasingly expect the status of tenth planet would most likely be awarded, if ever, to some other Pluto-like object. The newly-discovered TNO
Eris was the most popular candidate for status as the tenth planet, but the 2006
International Astronomical Union (IAU)
definition of the term "planet" considers it a
dwarf planet.
Recent
The
2006 redefinition, however, made it highly unlikely that any body will ever be termed a "tenth planet" by establishing orbital dominance as a principle. As Pluto has been eliminated from the list of planets, any object that meets the criteria will be classified as the ninth, not the tenth planet, assuming no other changes are made to the
definition of a planet.
Based on modern theories of solar system formation some
astronomers believe that bodies up to the size of
Mars are yet to be discovered orbiting the sun. If one is found that fits the
modern definition, it would constitute a ninth planet.
(External Link
) At this time, no such true ninth planet has been found, nor are any specific hypothetical bodies identified as potential planets.
In 2008,
Tadashi Mukai and Patryk Lakawka from the
University of Kobe published a hypothesis that the patterns in the orbits observed in the trans-Neptunian population argue for the existence of a ninth planet. According to models, the planet would be located at around 100
AU, and it's mass would be about 0.3 to 0.7 of that of the Earth. Due to the very low temperature, its surface could be cover of
ice,
ammoniac and
methane.[http://mx.news.yahoo.com/s/afp/jap
a]
Discovered candidates
Sedna and Quaoar
Two sizable TNO discoveries in the early 2000s prompted media usage of the term "tenth planet," although there was no tremendous appetite for their elevation to planethood in the scientific community.
50000 Quaoar was discovered in 2002 by
California Institute of Technology scientists. Although significantly smaller than Pluto, Quaoar was the next-largest TNO by a considerable margin at the time of its discovery.
Another object,
90377 Sedna, was discovered in 2004, at the time the most distant known object in the
solar system. It is speculated to be an inner member of the
Oort cloud, which is a distant reservoir of comets created when most of the original population of the Kuiper belt was scattered by the outer planets early in the
history of the solar system. Sedna is believed to be intermediate in size between Pluto and Quaoar.
Eris
The trans-Neptunian object named
Eris was discovered in early 2005 from imagery dating to 2003
(External Link
). Its size has been inferred at 2398
km, which is 4.81% larger than
Pluto, after the
Hubble Space Telescope was directed at the planet in 2006.
(External Link
) Because Eris is too far away to measure the size directly, this estimate is based on how much light it reflects to Earth and how much light it absorbs to keep it warm. Many media outlets reported that Eris is now the tenth planet in the solar system, and this classification was backed by
NASA at the time
(External Link
).
One of Eris' discoverers noted that any definition of "planet" that includes Pluto should also include this new, larger, object
(External Link
). While Pluto orbits in the
Kuiper Belt along with at least 700 other objects, Eris also has an eccentric and highly inclined (44°) orbit. Unlike
Pluto, Eris isn't situated in the Kuiper Belt, or the traditional gravitational orbit of any other known planet, and is therefore even more unusual than Pluto. Eris was eventually classified under the new category of
dwarf planet; its discovery was one of the primary factors for the reclassification of Pluto as a dwarf.
Suggested names: Persephone and Proserpina
Persephone has been the most frequently-suggested name for a new major planet. The major planets are, by tradition, named after
Greco-Roman gods. The
Roman god Pluto, the name of the outermost known planet of the solar system for the 76 years it was defined as such, corresponds to the
Greek Hades.
Persephone, as Hades' wife, was therefore a fitting name for the 10th planet.
The name is currently used for the
asteroid 399 Persephone, discovered in 1899 (before the planet Pluto, which was found in 1930); since the
International Astronomical Union (IAU) Committee on Small Body Nomenclature, which is charged with naming
minor planets, has a policy against names that are too similar, it's unlikely that any
Trans-Neptunian Objects (TNOs) will be named "Persephone".
An alternate proposal would use
Proserpina, wife of
Pluto, the Roman name for Persephone; but
26 Proserpina received that name in 1853, presenting the same nomenclature policy problems as "Persephone". Several asteroids however do share names with the moons of the outer planets.
The mothers of Persephone,
Demeter, and of Proserpina,
Ceres, have been used as names of asteroids:
1108 Demeter and
Ceres respectively. (Demeter was also briefly used as an unofficial name for the moon of Jupiter now called
Lysithea). See
Eleusinian Mysteries for details of the relationship between these three deities from Greek and Roman mythology. It is a historical curiosity that in the seventeenth century, Ceres and Proserpina were sometimes used as astronomical names for the Earth and Moon, respectively.
The novel
Mostly Harmless, fourth
sequel to
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy involves aliens landing on the newly discovered tenth planet (the novel was written before Pluto was officially redefined, and before Eris was discovered), which is officially called Persephone (and unofficially known as
Rupert).
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