Using the Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA)
located in the Atacama desert of northern Chile, astronomers were surprised to
discover evidence that could point to a massive new planet X at the edge of our
own solar system. Given this startling revelation, scientists now concentrated
all their efforts to identify the object whose nature remains completely
unknown for now!
Although we thought to know everything about the
configuration of our solar system, however it seems that we still have to
unlock some secrets. Indeed, by using the ALMA radio telescopes in Chile, two
independent teams of scientists spotted undetected object lurking on the
furthest edge of our solar system.
As the scientists explain in a paper uploaded on
December 10 to arXiv
— not yet been formally published or peer-reviewed, this celestial body is so
far from the sun that they first thought it belonged to our neighboring binary
star Alpha Centauri. The Alpha Centauri star system is about 4.37 light years
of our sun consisting of three stars, the pair Alpha Centauri A and Alpha
Centauri B, two main stars orbiting around each other and a small and faint red
dwarf, Alpha Centauri C — better known as Proxima Centauri — and some
scientists think there’s at least one planet orbiting around the binary Alpha
Centauri AB.
But in separate pairs of snapshots — taken over a
period of months — respectively July 7, 2014 and May 2, 2015, astronomers
noticed that the object in question seemed to move swiftly against the ‘fixed’
background stars. Given this observation, scientists have concluded that the
celestial body was much closer to Earth than was previously thought. The
authors say the object is not also a star, such a star would have been bright
enough to be seen before. It is also not likely to be part of Alpha Centauri
star system, rather astronomers believe the mysterious object is somewhere
between 10 billion and 2 trillion miles from Earth.
Until the nature of the source becomes clear, we have named it Gna,
write the authors in the study.
Unless there are yet unknown, but significant, issues with ALMA
observations, we have detected a previously unknown objects in our solar
system.
We argue that the object is most likely part of the solar system… albeit at
a distance too far to be detectable at other wavelengths.
An important debate is now raging within the
scientific community about the nature of this object. Different kinds of space
object could explain the light source. Among the most widely discussed
theories:
We have three guesses for what it might be: a small icy chunk about 9
billion miles away from Earth, a “super Earth” (that would fit the bill of “Planet
X”) orbiting somewhere around 28 billion miles away from Earth, or it could be
a brown dwarf much farther away — about 20,000 Astronomical Units (AU) from
Earth.
Other scientists are highly skeptical of this
discovery. Mike Brown, at Caltech, was skeptical of the claims, saying:
Fun fact: if it is true that ALMA accidentally discovered a massive outer
solar system object in its tiny tiny tiny field of view that would suggest that
there are something like 200,000 Earth sized planets in the outer solar system.
Which, um, no. Even better: I just realized that this many Earth-sized planets
existing would destabilize the entire solar system and we would all die.
And as astronomer Phil Plait pointed out in a Slate
blog post:
Even if real, these objects might not be part of our solar system at all.
Maybe they’re (each) actually two separate, distant galaxies, both of which
change brightness over time so one brightened while the other faded. I know,
that’s a reach, but it shows there could be other explanations.
The only way to know for sure is to gather more observations. Either by
tracking its motion or by gathering observations at other wavelengths we can
eventually get a handle on its size and distance,
Astrophysicist Brian Koberlein wrote on Forbes.
Whether dwarf planet, super-Earth or small star, it seems clear that
something is lurking on the outer edge of our solar system.
Meanwhile, astronomers will continue to study the
object with extra instruments in the hope of, some day, they’ll identify it.
Whether its planet X or not we will see.
Source: CosmosUp Staff
| On 16, Dec 2015 http://www.cosmosup.com/dark-matter-what-is-it/
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