‘Planet 10’ may be lurking at edge of solar system
Washington: A mysterious, unseen ‘Planet 10’ may be lurking in the outer reaches of our solar system, say scientists including one of Indian origin, who have found evidence of a Mars-like object that could be orbiting our Sun.
This object would be different from, and much closer than, the Planet Nine — whose existence yet awaits confirmation.
Researchers, including Renu Malhotra of the University of Arizona in the US, found compelling evidence of a yet-to-be- discovered planetary body with a mass somewhere between that of Mars and Earth.
The mysterious mass has given away its presence only by controlling the orbital planes of a population of space rocks known as Kuiper Belt objects (KBOs) in the icy outskirts of the solar system.
While most KBOs — debris left over from the formation of the solar system — orbit the Sun with orbital tilts that average out to the invariable plane of the solar system, the most distant of the Kuiper Belt’s objects do not. Their average plane is tilted away from the invariable plane by about eight degrees, researchers said.
The Kuiper Belt lies beyond the orbit of Neptune and extends to a few hundred Astronomical Units (AU) — the distance between Earth and the sun. Like its inner solar system cousin, the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter, the Kuiper Belt hosts a vast number of minor planets, mostly small icy bodies and a few dwarf planets.
That planet is predicted to be much more massive (about 10 Earth masses) and much farther out at 500 to 700 AU.