Possible new dwarf planet spotted near the edge of the solar system
Cutout images of all 19 detections of the newly identified trans-Neptunian object named 2017 OF201 are seen, from the Canada France Hawaii Telescope (CFHT) and the Dark Energy Camera (DECam) on the 4-meter Victor M. Blanco Telescope, released by the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey, on May 22, 2025. Jiaxuan Li and Sihao Cheng/Handout via REUTERS
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Scientists have identified an object about 435 miles (700
km) wide inhabiting the frigid outer reaches of our solar system that
might qualify as a dwarf planet, spotting it as it travels on a highly
elongated orbital path around the sun.
The researchers called it one of the most distant visible
objects in our solar system, and said its existence indicates that a vast
expanse of space beyond the outermost planet Neptune and a region
called the Kuiper Belt may not be deserted, as long thought. The Kuiper Belt is
populated by numerous icy bodies.
Given the name 2017 OF201, the object falls into a category
called trans-Neptunian objects that orbit the sun at a distance beyond that of
Neptune. The object takes about 25,000 years to complete a single orbit of the
sun, compared to 365 days for Earth to do so.
The researchers said 2017 OF201 was identified in
observations by telescopes in Chile and Hawaii spanning seven years.
"It is potentially large enough to qualify as a dwarf
planet. Its orbit is very wide and eccentric, which means it experienced an
interesting orbital migration path in the past," said astrophysicist Sihao
Cheng of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey, who led the
study with collaborators Jiaxuan Li and Eritas Yang, graduate students at
Princeton University.
Its size is estimated to be a bit smaller than Ceres, which
is the smallest of the solar system's five recognised dwarf planets and has a
diameter of about 590 miles (950 km). Pluto, the largest of those dwarf
planets, has a diameter of about 1,477 miles (2,377 km).
The mass of 2017 OF201 is estimated to be about 20,000 times
smaller than Earth's and 50 times smaller than Pluto's.
"We don't know the shape yet. Unfortunately, it is too
far away and it is a bit difficult to resolve it with telescopes," Cheng
said. "Its composition is totally unknown yet, but likely similar to other
icy bodies."
The discovery was announced by the Minor Planet Centre of
the International Astronomical Union, an international organisation of
astronomers, and detailed in a study posted on the open-access research
site arXiv. The study has not yet been peer reviewed.
Earth's orbital distance from the sun is called an
astronomical unit. 2017 OF201 is currently located at a distance of 90.5
astronomical units from the sun, meaning 90.5 times as far as Earth.
But at its furthest point during its orbit, 2017 OF201 is
more than 1,600 astronomical units from the sun, while the closest point on its
orbit is about 45 astronomical units. That means it sometimes is closer to the
sun than Pluto, whose orbital distance ranges from 30 to 49 astronomical units
as it travels an elliptical path around the sun.
The researchers suspect that the extreme orbit of 2017 OF201
may have been caused by a long-ago close encounter with the gravitational
influence of a giant planet.
"We still don't know much about the solar system far
away because currently it is difficult to directly see things beyond about 150
astronomical units," Cheng said. "The presence of this single object
suggests that there could be another hundred or so other objects with similar
orbit and size. They are just too far away to be detectable right now."
The five dwarf planets recognised by the International
Astronomical Union are, in order of distance from the sun: Ceres, which is the
largest object in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter, then Pluto,
Haumea, Makemake and Eris, which all orbit beyond Neptune.
The organisation defines a planet and a dwarf planet
differently. A planet must orbit its host star - in our case, the sun - and must
be mostly round and sufficiently large that its gravitational strength clears
away any other objects of similar size near its orbit. A dwarf planet must
orbit the sun and be mostly round, but it has not cleared its orbit of other
objects.
Cheng said the discovery of 2017 OF201 has implications for
hypotheses involving the potential existence of a ninth planet in our solar
system, dubbed Planet X or Planet Nine.
This is because 2017 OF201's orbit does not follow the
pattern exhibited by other known trans-Neptunian objects, which tend to cluster
together. Some scientists had hypothesised that such clustering was caused by
the gravity of a yet-to-be-discovered planet.
"The existence of 2017 OF201 as an outlier to such
clustering could potentially challenge this hypothesis," Cheng said.


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