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List of hypothetical Solar System objects

A hypothetical Solar System object is a planet, natural satellite, subsatellite or similar body in the Solar System whose existence is not known, but has been inferred from observational scientific evidence. Over the years a number of hypothetical planets have been proposed, and many have been disproved. However, even today there is scientific speculation about the possibility of planets yet unknown that may exist beyond the range of our current knowledge.

Planets edit

  • Counter-Earth, a planet situated on the other side of the Sun from that of the Earth.
  • Fifth planet (hypothetical), historical speculation about a planet between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter.
    • Phaeton, a planet situated between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter whose destruction supposedly led to the formation of the asteroid belt. This hypothesis is now considered unlikely, since the asteroid belt has far too little mass to have resulted from the explosion of a large planet. In 2018, a study from researchers at the University of Florida found the asteroid belt was created from the fragments of at least five or six ancient planetary-sized objects instead of a single planet.[1]
    • Krypton, named after the destroyed native world of Superman, theorized by Michael Ovenden to have been a gas giant between Mars and Jupiter nearly as large as Saturn and also attributed for the formation of the asteroid belt[2][3]
    • Planet V, a planet thought by John Chambers and Jack Lissauer to have once existed between Mars and the asteroid belt, based on computer simulations.
  • Various planets beyond Neptune:
    • Planet Nine, a planet proposed to explain apparent alignments in the orbits of a number of distant trans-Neptunian objects.
    • Planet X, a hypothetical planet beyond Neptune. Initially employed to account for supposed perturbations (systematic deviations) in the orbits of Uranus and Neptune, belief in its existence ultimately inspired the search for Pluto. Though the concept has since been abandoned following more precise measurements of Neptune's mass, which accounted for all observed perturbations, it has been re-applied to account for supposed deviations in the motions of Kuiper belt objects. Such explanations are still controversial,[according to whom?] however.
    • Hyperion, a large distant 10th planet theorized in 2000 to have had an effect on Kuiper Belt formation.[4]
    • Tyche, a hypothetical planet in the Oort Cloud supposedly responsible for producing the statistical excess in long period comets in a band.[5] Results from the WISE telescope survey in 2014 have ruled it out.[6][7][8]
    • Oceanus and two more planets[which?], proposed by Thomas Jefferson Jackson See[when?].[9]
    • Brahma and Vishnu, proposed by Venkatesh P. Ketakar.[10]
    • Hades, proposed by Theodor Grigull[when?][11]
    • "Planet Ten" as proposed by Volk and Malhotra, a Mars-sized planetoid believed to be responsible for the inclination of Kuiper Belt objects beyond the Kuiper cliff at 50 AU[12][13]
    • "Planet Ten" as proposed by Sverre Aarseth and Carlos and Raúl de la Fuente Marcos, which they believe stabilizes the orbits of other Kuiper Belt objects[14][15]
    • Planets O, P, Q, R, S, T, and U, proposed by William Henry Pickering[16][10]
    • A Trans-Plutonian planet proposed by Tadashi Mukai and Patryk Sofia Lykawka[when?], roughly the size of Earth or Mars with an eccentric orbit between 100 and 200 AU[17][18][19]
    • Another Trans-Neptunian planet at 1,500 AU away from the Sun, proposed by Rodney Gomes in 2012[20]
  • Theia or Orpheus,[21] a Mars-sized impactor believed to have collided with the Earth roughly 4.5 billion years ago; an event which created the Moon. Evidence from 2019 suggests that it may have originated in the outer Solar System.[22]
  • Vulcan, a hypothetical planet once believed to exist inside the orbit of Mercury. Initially proposed as the cause for the perturbations in the orbit of Mercury, some astronomers spent many years searching for it, with many instances of people claiming to have found it. The perturbations in Mercury's orbit were later accounted for via Einstein's General Theory of Relativity.
    • Vulcanoids, asteroids that may exist within a gravitationally stable region inside Mercury's orbit. They may have originated as debris resulting from a collision between Mercury and another protoplanet, stripping away much of Mercury's inner crust and mantle.[23] None have been detected by STEREO or SOHO.[24][25]
      • The lack of vulcanoids led to a suggestion in 2016 that a super-Earth planet that once orbited the Sun closer to Mercury was able to clear its neighborhood before spiraling down into the Sun.[26]
  • In the Five-planet Nice model a fifth giant planet originally in an orbit between Saturn and Uranus is ejected from the Solar System into interstellar space after a close encounter with Jupiter, resulting in a rapid divergence of Jupiter's and Saturn's orbit which may have ensured the orbital stability of the terrestrial planets in the inner Solar System. It may have also precipitated the Late Heavy Bombardment of the inner Solar System.[27]
  • A and B, two super-Earth (or even supergiant) planets theorized by Michael Woolfson as part of his Capture theory on Solar System formation. Originally the Solar System's two innermost planets, these two collided, ejecting A (save its moons Mars, the Moon, Pluto, and the other dwarf planets) out of the Solar System and shattering B to form the Earth, Venus, Mercury, asteroid belt, and comets.[28]
  • A captured planet from another solar system was proposed to exist in the Oort cloud much further than the hypothetical Planet Nine.[29]Raymond, Sean N.; Izidoro, Andre; Kaib, Nathan A. (2023). "Oort cloud (Exo)planets". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society: Letters. 524: L72–L77. arXiv:2306.11109. doi:10.1093/mnrasl/slad079.

Moons edit

  • Chiron, a moon of Saturn supposedly sighted by Hermann Goldschmidt in 1861 but never observed by anyone else.
  • Chrysalis, a hypothetical moon of Saturn, named in 2022 by scientists of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology using data from the Cassini–Huygens mission, thought to have been torn apart by Saturn's tidal forces, somewhere between 200 and 100 million years ago, with up to 99% of its mass being swallowed by Saturn, and the remaining 1% forming the rings of Saturn.
  • Other moons of Earth, such as Petit's moon, Lilith, Waltemath's moons and Bargby's moons.
  • Mercury's moon, hypothesised to account for an unusual pattern of radiation detected by Mariner 10 in the vicinity of Mercury. Subsequent data from the mission revealed the actual source to be the star 31 Crateris.
  • Neith, a purported moon of Venus, falsely detected by a number of telescopic observers in the 17th and 18th centuries. Now known not to exist, the object has been explained as a series of misidentified stars and internal reflections inside the optics of particular telescope designs. It was also alternatively proposed by Jean-Charles Houzeau to be a heliocentric planet that orbited the Sun every 283 days and be in conjunction with Venus every 1080 days.
  • Themis, a moon of Saturn which astronomer William Pickering claimed to have discovered in 1905, but which was never observed again.[30]

Stars edit

  • Nemesis, a brown or red dwarf whose existence was suggested in 1984 by physicist Richard A. Muller, based on purported periodicities in mass extinctions within Earth's fossil record. Its regular passage through the Solar System's Oort cloud would send large numbers of comets towards Earth, massively increasing the chances of an impact. Also believed to be the cause of minor planet Sedna's unusual elongated orbit. The existence of the Nemesis in the modern Solar system was ruled out in 2014 after the infrared survey performed by WISE spacecraft found no brown dwarf up to 10,000 astronomical units (0.16 ly) from Sun.
  • Raymond Arthur Lyttleton's model on the formation of the Solar System had a former binary star system by the Sun, which merged and broke into two due to rotational instability forming Jupiter and Saturn.[31]
  • Fred Hoyle's model on Solar System formation had a former and more massive binary companion to the Sun that exploded in a supernova due to nuclear fusion failing within its interior and it collapsing as a result (which had not yet been verified at the time). The star's supernova remnant would be captured by the Sun and shaped into a protoplanetary disk, from which the planets formed.[31]
  • One assumption suggests that the hypothetical Planet Nine is actually a primordial black hole.[32]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Study reveals secret origins of asteroids and meteorites". news.ufl.edu. 2018-07-02. Retrieved 2018-10-17.
  2. ^ Ovenden, M.W. (1972). "Bode's law and the missing planet". Nature. 239: 508–509. doi:10.1038/239508a0. S2CID 30520852.
  3. ^ Ovenden, M.W. (1973). "Planetary Distances and the Missing Planet". Recent Advances in Dynamic Astronomy. Reidel. pp. 319–332.[full citation needed]
  4. ^ Collander-Brown, S.; Maran, M.; Williams, I. P. (2000-10-11). "The effect on the Edgeworth-Kuiper Belt of a large distant tenth planet". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 318 (1): 101–108. Bibcode:2000MNRAS.318..101C. doi:10.1046/j.1365-8711.2000.03640.x. ISSN 0035-8711.
  5. ^ The Independent, "Up telescope! Search begins for giant new planet", Sunday 13 February 2011, Paul Rodgers
  6. ^ K. L., Luhman (7 March 2014). "A Search For A Distant Companion To The Sun With The Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer". The Astrophysical Journal. 781 (1): 4. Bibcode:2014ApJ...781....4L. doi:10.1088/0004-637X/781/1/4. S2CID 122930471. Retrieved 20 March 2014.
  7. ^ Matese, John J.; Whitmire, Daniel P. (2011). "Persistent evidence of a jovian mass solar companion in the Oort cloud". Icarus. 211 (2): 926–938. arXiv:1004.4584. Bibcode:2011Icar..211..926M. doi:10.1016/j.icarus.2010.11.009. S2CID 44204219.
  8. ^ Helhoski, Anna. "News 02/16/11 Does the Solar System Have Giant New Planet?". The Norwalk Daily Voice. Retrieved 10 July 2012.
  9. ^ TJ Sherrill (1999). "A Career of Controversy: The Anomaly of T. J. J. See". Journal for the History of Astronomy. 30: 25–50. Bibcode:1999JHA....30...25S. doi:10.1177/002182869903000102. S2CID 117727302.
  10. ^ a b JG Chhabra; SD Sharma; M Khanna (1984). (PDF). Indian Journal of History of Science. 19 (1): 18–26. Bibcode:1984InJHS..19...18C. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-02-25. Retrieved 2008-09-04.
  11. ^ "Galaxy Magazine (August 1956)". August 1956.
  12. ^ Osbourne, Hannah (23 June 2017). "Forget Planet 9 - There's Evidence Of A Tenth Planet Lurking At The Edge Of The Solar System". Newsweek. Retrieved 23 June 2017.
  13. ^ Volk, Kathryn; Malhotra, Renu (2017). "The curiously warped mean plane of the Kuiper belt". The Astronomical Journal. 154 (2): 62. arXiv:1704.02444. Bibcode:2017AJ....154...62V. doi:10.3847/1538-3881/aa79ff. S2CID 5756310.
  14. ^ Knapton, Sarah (13 June 2016). "Solar System may hold ten planets or more, say scientists". The Telegraph.
  15. ^ Trujillo, Chadwick A.; Sheppard, Scott S. (2014). "A Sedna-like body with a perihelion of 80 astronomical units". Nature. 507 (7493): 471–474. Bibcode:2014Natur.507..471T. doi:10.1038/nature13156. PMID 24670765. S2CID 4393431.
  16. ^ Hoyt, William Graves (1976). "W. H. Pickering's Planetary Predictions and the Discovery of Pluto". Isis. 67 (4): 551–564. doi:10.1086/351668. PMID 794024. S2CID 26512655.
  17. ^ Patryk S., Lykawka; Tadashi, Mukai (2008). "An Outer Planet Beyond Pluto and the Origin of the Trans-Neptunian Belt Architecture". The Astronomical Journal. 135 (4): 1161–1200. arXiv:0712.2198. Bibcode:2008AJ....135.1161L. doi:10.1088/0004-6256/135/4/1161. S2CID 118414447.
  18. ^ Than, Ker (18 June 2008). "Large 'Planet X' May Lurk Beyond Pluto". Space.com. Retrieved 18 July 2016.
  19. ^ Hasegawa, Kyoko (28 February 2008). "Japanese scientists eye mysterious 'Planet X'". BibliotecaPleyades.net. Retrieved 18 July 2016.
  20. ^ . National Geographic. 2012. Archived from the original on May 14, 2012. Retrieved 2012-05-21.
  21. ^ Byrne, Charles (2007). The Far Side of the Moon: A Photographic Guide. Springer. p. 202. ISBN 9780387732060.
  22. ^ Budde, Gerrit; Burkhardt, Christoph; Kleine, Thorsten (2019-05-20). "Molybdenum isotopic evidence for the late accretion of outer Solar System material to Earth". Nature Astronomy. 3 (8): 736–741. Bibcode:2019NatAs...3..736B. doi:10.1038/s41550-019-0779-y. ISSN 2397-3366. S2CID 181460133.
  23. ^ Alexander, Amir (2004). . The Planetary Society. Archived from the original on 2008-10-11. Retrieved 2008-12-25.
  24. ^ Steffl, A. J.; Cunningham, N. J.; Shinn, A. B.; Stern, S. A. (2013). "A Search for Vulcanoids with the STEREO Heliospheric Imager". Icarus. 233 (1): 48–56. arXiv:1301.3804. Bibcode:2013Icar..223...48S. doi:10.1016/j.icarus.2012.11.031. S2CID 118612132.
  25. ^ Schumacher, G.; Gay, J. (2001). "An Attempt to detect Vulcanoids with SOHO/LASCO images". Astronomy & Astrophysics. 368 (3): 1108–1114. Bibcode:2001A&A...368.1108S. doi:10.1051/0004-6361:20000356.
  26. ^ "Our sun may have eaten a super-Earth for breakfast".
  27. ^ Lisa Grossman: "Lost planet explains solar system puzzle" New Scientist: 01.10.2011: 14–15
  28. ^ Dormand, J. R.; Woolfson, M. M. (1977). "Interactions in the early solar system". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 180 (2): 243–279. Bibcode:1977MNRAS.180..243D. doi:10.1093/mnras/180.2.243.
  29. ^ "There might be an ice giant planet hiding in our solar system". 27 June 2023.
  30. ^ Hypothetical Planets
  31. ^ a b Williams, I.O., Cremin, A.W. 1968. A survey of theories relating to the origin of the solar system. Qtly. Rev. RAS 9: 40–62. ads.abs.harvard.edu/abs
  32. ^ "Planet Nine may be a black hole the size of a baseball". October 2019.

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This article is about hypothetical Solar System objects in astronomy For hypothetical Solar System objects not recognized by science see Planetary objects proposed in religion astrology ufology and pseudoscience For other hypothetical astronomical objects see Hypothetical astronomical object A hypothetical Solar System object is a planet natural satellite subsatellite or similar body in the Solar System whose existence is not known but has been inferred from observational scientific evidence Over the years a number of hypothetical planets have been proposed and many have been disproved However even today there is scientific speculation about the possibility of planets yet unknown that may exist beyond the range of our current knowledge Contents 1 Planets 2 Moons 3 Stars 4 See also 5 ReferencesPlanets editCounter Earth a planet situated on the other side of the Sun from that of the Earth Fifth planet hypothetical historical speculation about a planet between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter Phaeton a planet situated between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter whose destruction supposedly led to the formation of the asteroid belt This hypothesis is now considered unlikely since the asteroid belt has far too little mass to have resulted from the explosion of a large planet In 2018 a study from researchers at the University of Florida found the asteroid belt was created from the fragments of at least five or six ancient planetary sized objects instead of a single planet 1 Krypton named after the destroyed native world of Superman theorized by Michael Ovenden to have been a gas giant between Mars and Jupiter nearly as large as Saturn and also attributed for the formation of the asteroid belt 2 3 Planet V a planet thought by John Chambers and Jack Lissauer to have once existed between Mars and the asteroid belt based on computer simulations Various planets beyond Neptune Planet Nine a planet proposed to explain apparent alignments in the orbits of a number of distant trans Neptunian objects Planet X a hypothetical planet beyond Neptune Initially employed to account for supposed perturbations systematic deviations in the orbits of Uranus and Neptune belief in its existence ultimately inspired the search for Pluto Though the concept has since been abandoned following more precise measurements of Neptune s mass which accounted for all observed perturbations it has been re applied to account for supposed deviations in the motions of Kuiper belt objects Such explanations are still controversial according to whom however Hyperion a large distant 10th planet theorized in 2000 to have had an effect on Kuiper Belt formation 4 Tyche a hypothetical planet in the Oort Cloud supposedly responsible for producing the statistical excess in long period comets in a band 5 Results from the WISE telescope survey in 2014 have ruled it out 6 7 8 Oceanus and two more planets which proposed by Thomas Jefferson Jackson See when 9 Brahma and Vishnu proposed by Venkatesh P Ketakar 10 Hades proposed by Theodor Grigull when 11 Planet Ten as proposed by Volk and Malhotra a Mars sized planetoid believed to be responsible for the inclination of Kuiper Belt objects beyond the Kuiper cliff at 50 AU 12 13 Planet Ten as proposed by Sverre Aarseth and Carlos and Raul de la Fuente Marcos which they believe stabilizes the orbits of other Kuiper Belt objects 14 15 Planets O P Q R S T and U proposed by William Henry Pickering 16 10 A Trans Plutonian planet proposed by Tadashi Mukai and Patryk Sofia Lykawka when roughly the size of Earth or Mars with an eccentric orbit between 100 and 200 AU 17 18 19 Another Trans Neptunian planet at 1 500 AU away from the Sun proposed by Rodney Gomes in 2012 20 Theia or Orpheus 21 a Mars sized impactor believed to have collided with the Earth roughly 4 5 billion years ago an event which created the Moon Evidence from 2019 suggests that it may have originated in the outer Solar System 22 Vulcan a hypothetical planet once believed to exist inside the orbit of Mercury Initially proposed as the cause for the perturbations in the orbit of Mercury some astronomers spent many years searching for it with many instances of people claiming to have found it The perturbations in Mercury s orbit were later accounted for via Einstein s General Theory of Relativity Vulcanoids asteroids that may exist within a gravitationally stable region inside Mercury s orbit They may have originated as debris resulting from a collision between Mercury and another protoplanet stripping away much of Mercury s inner crust and mantle 23 None have been detected by STEREO or SOHO 24 25 The lack of vulcanoids led to a suggestion in 2016 that a super Earth planet that once orbited the Sun closer to Mercury was able to clear its neighborhood before spiraling down into the Sun 26 In the Five planet Nice model a fifth giant planet originally in an orbit between Saturn and Uranus is ejected from the Solar System into interstellar space after a close encounter with Jupiter resulting in a rapid divergence of Jupiter s and Saturn s orbit which may have ensured the orbital stability of the terrestrial planets in the inner Solar System It may have also precipitated the Late Heavy Bombardment of the inner Solar System 27 A and B two super Earth or even supergiant planets theorized by Michael Woolfson as part of his Capture theory on Solar System formation Originally the Solar System s two innermost planets these two collided ejecting A save its moons Mars the Moon Pluto and the other dwarf planets out of the Solar System and shattering B to form the Earth Venus Mercury asteroid belt and comets 28 A captured planet from another solar system was proposed to exist in the Oort cloud much further than the hypothetical Planet Nine 29 Raymond Sean N Izidoro Andre Kaib Nathan A 2023 Oort cloud Exo planets Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Letters 524 L72 L77 arXiv 2306 11109 doi 10 1093 mnrasl slad079 Moons editChiron a moon of Saturn supposedly sighted by Hermann Goldschmidt in 1861 but never observed by anyone else Chrysalis a hypothetical moon of Saturn named in 2022 by scientists of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology using data from the Cassini Huygens mission thought to have been torn apart by Saturn s tidal forces somewhere between 200 and 100 million years ago with up to 99 of its mass being swallowed by Saturn and the remaining 1 forming the rings of Saturn Other moons of Earth such as Petit s moon Lilith Waltemath s moons and Bargby s moons Mercury s moon hypothesised to account for an unusual pattern of radiation detected by Mariner 10 in the vicinity of Mercury Subsequent data from the mission revealed the actual source to be the star 31 Crateris Neith a purported moon of Venus falsely detected by a number of telescopic observers in the 17th and 18th centuries Now known not to exist the object has been explained as a series of misidentified stars and internal reflections inside the optics of particular telescope designs It was also alternatively proposed by Jean Charles Houzeau to be a heliocentric planet that orbited the Sun every 283 days and be in conjunction with Venus every 1080 days Themis a moon of Saturn which astronomer William Pickering claimed to have discovered in 1905 but which was never observed again 30 Stars editNemesis a brown or red dwarf whose existence was suggested in 1984 by physicist Richard A Muller based on purported periodicities in mass extinctions within Earth s fossil record Its regular passage through the Solar System s Oort cloud would send large numbers of comets towards Earth massively increasing the chances of an impact Also believed to be the cause of minor planet Sedna s unusual elongated orbit The existence of the Nemesis in the modern Solar system was ruled out in 2014 after the infrared survey performed by WISE spacecraft found no brown dwarf up to 10 000 astronomical units 0 16 ly from Sun Raymond Arthur Lyttleton s model on the formation of the Solar System had a former binary star system by the Sun which merged and broke into two due to rotational instability forming Jupiter and Saturn 31 Fred Hoyle s model on Solar System formation had a former and more massive binary companion to the Sun that exploded in a supernova due to nuclear fusion failing within its interior and it collapsing as a result which had not yet been verified at the time The star s supernova remnant would be captured by the Sun and shaped into a protoplanetary disk from which the planets formed 31 One assumption suggests that the hypothetical Planet Nine is actually a primordial black hole 32 See also editSubsatellite Ninth planet disambiguation Oort cloud Planets beyond Neptune Nebular hypothesis Tenth planet disambiguation Theoretical planetology Trans Neptunian object Trans Neptunian objects in fictionReferences edit Study reveals secret origins of asteroids and meteorites news ufl edu 2018 07 02 Retrieved 2018 10 17 Ovenden M W 1972 Bode s law and the missing planet Nature 239 508 509 doi 10 1038 239508a0 S2CID 30520852 Ovenden M W 1973 Planetary Distances and the Missing Planet Recent Advances in Dynamic Astronomy Reidel pp 319 332 full citation needed Collander Brown S Maran M Williams I P 2000 10 11 The effect on the Edgeworth Kuiper Belt of a large distant tenth planet Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 318 1 101 108 Bibcode 2000MNRAS 318 101C doi 10 1046 j 1365 8711 2000 03640 x ISSN 0035 8711 The Independent Up telescope Search begins for giant new planet Sunday 13 February 2011 Paul Rodgers K L Luhman 7 March 2014 A Search For A Distant Companion To The Sun With The Wide field Infrared Survey Explorer The Astrophysical Journal 781 1 4 Bibcode 2014ApJ 781 4L doi 10 1088 0004 637X 781 1 4 S2CID 122930471 Retrieved 20 March 2014 Matese John J Whitmire Daniel P 2011 Persistent evidence of a jovian mass solar companion in the Oort cloud Icarus 211 2 926 938 arXiv 1004 4584 Bibcode 2011Icar 211 926M doi 10 1016 j icarus 2010 11 009 S2CID 44204219 Helhoski Anna News 02 16 11 Does the Solar System Have Giant New Planet The Norwalk Daily Voice Retrieved 10 July 2012 TJ Sherrill 1999 A Career of Controversy The Anomaly of T J J See Journal for the History of Astronomy 30 25 50 Bibcode 1999JHA 30 25S doi 10 1177 002182869903000102 S2CID 117727302 a b JG Chhabra SD Sharma M Khanna 1984 Prediction of Pluto by V P Ketakar PDF Indian Journal of History of Science 19 1 18 26 Bibcode 1984InJHS 19 18C Archived from the original PDF on 2009 02 25 Retrieved 2008 09 04 Galaxy Magazine August 1956 August 1956 Osbourne Hannah 23 June 2017 Forget Planet 9 There s Evidence Of A Tenth Planet Lurking At The Edge Of The Solar System Newsweek Retrieved 23 June 2017 Volk Kathryn Malhotra Renu 2017 The curiously warped mean plane of the Kuiper belt The Astronomical Journal 154 2 62 arXiv 1704 02444 Bibcode 2017AJ 154 62V doi 10 3847 1538 3881 aa79ff S2CID 5756310 Knapton Sarah 13 June 2016 Solar System may hold ten planets or more say scientists The Telegraph Trujillo Chadwick A Sheppard Scott S 2014 A Sedna like body with a perihelion of 80 astronomical units Nature 507 7493 471 474 Bibcode 2014Natur 507 471T doi 10 1038 nature13156 PMID 24670765 S2CID 4393431 Hoyt William Graves 1976 W H Pickering s Planetary Predictions and the Discovery of Pluto Isis 67 4 551 564 doi 10 1086 351668 PMID 794024 S2CID 26512655 Patryk S Lykawka Tadashi Mukai 2008 An Outer Planet Beyond Pluto and the Origin of the Trans Neptunian Belt Architecture The Astronomical Journal 135 4 1161 1200 arXiv 0712 2198 Bibcode 2008AJ 135 1161L doi 10 1088 0004 6256 135 4 1161 S2CID 118414447 Than Ker 18 June 2008 Large Planet X May Lurk Beyond Pluto Space com Retrieved 18 July 2016 Hasegawa Kyoko 28 February 2008 Japanese scientists eye mysterious Planet X BibliotecaPleyades net Retrieved 18 July 2016 New planet found in our Solar System National Geographic 2012 Archived from the original on May 14 2012 Retrieved 2012 05 21 Byrne Charles 2007 The Far Side of the Moon A Photographic Guide Springer p 202 ISBN 9780387732060 Budde Gerrit Burkhardt Christoph Kleine Thorsten 2019 05 20 Molybdenum isotopic evidence for the late accretion of outer Solar System material to Earth Nature Astronomy 3 8 736 741 Bibcode 2019NatAs 3 736B doi 10 1038 s41550 019 0779 y ISSN 2397 3366 S2CID 181460133 Alexander Amir 2004 Small Faint and Elusive The Search for Vulcanoids The Planetary Society Archived from the original on 2008 10 11 Retrieved 2008 12 25 Steffl A J Cunningham N J Shinn A B Stern S A 2013 A Search for Vulcanoids with the STEREO Heliospheric Imager Icarus 233 1 48 56 arXiv 1301 3804 Bibcode 2013Icar 223 48S doi 10 1016 j icarus 2012 11 031 S2CID 118612132 Schumacher G Gay J 2001 An Attempt to detect Vulcanoids with SOHO LASCO images Astronomy amp Astrophysics 368 3 1108 1114 Bibcode 2001A amp A 368 1108S doi 10 1051 0004 6361 20000356 Our sun may have eaten a super Earth for breakfast Lisa Grossman Lost planet explains solar system puzzle New Scientist 01 10 2011 14 15 Dormand J R Woolfson M M 1977 Interactions in the early solar system Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 180 2 243 279 Bibcode 1977MNRAS 180 243D doi 10 1093 mnras 180 2 243 There might be an ice giant planet hiding in our solar system 27 June 2023 Hypothetical Planets a b Williams I O Cremin A W 1968 A survey of theories relating to the origin of the solar system Qtly Rev RAS 9 40 62 ads abs harvard edu abs Planet Nine may be a black hole the size of a baseball October 2019 Portals nbsp Stars nbsp Spaceflight nbsp Outer space nbsp Science Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of hypothetical Solar System objects amp oldid 1186068162, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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