Arguments for the presence of a distant large undiscovered Solar system planet
Abstract
Aphelion distances of long-period comets show a slight excess around 30000 to 50000au from the Sun. Positions of cometary aphelia within these distance limits are aligned along a great circle inclined to both the ecliptic and the Galactic plane. This paper examines one of the possible explanations for this non-random clustering: that it is due to orbital perturbations by an undiscovered object orbiting within the above-mentioned distances. A model consistent with the observations gives a retrograde orbit (inclination 120 deg) for the object with a longitude of the ascending node at 77 deg+/-13 deg, a period of 5.8x10^6 yr and a radius of 32000au. The same model gives a present position for the undiscovered object of RA 20^h 35^m, Dec.+5 deg, with an error ellipse semimajor axis of 14 deg and a semiminor axis of 7 deg. The magnitude is likely to be fainter than 23. Such a distant object would almost certainly not remain bound for the age of the Solar system, and recent capture into the present orbit, although also of low probability, remains the least unlikely origin for this hypothetical planet.
- Publication:
-
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
- Pub Date:
- October 1999
- DOI:
- 10.1046/j.1365-8711.1999.02806.x
- Bibcode:
- 1999MNRAS.309...31M
- Keywords:
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- COMETS: GENERAL: PLANETS AND SATELLITES: GENERAL