
What we know about the search for ‘Planet Nine' in our solar system
The gravitational pull of an undiscovered planet, several times larger than Earth, was seen as a possible reason for the discrepancy.
That mystery was ultimately explained by a recalculation of Neptune 's mass in the 1990s, but then a new theory of a potential Planet Nine was put forward in 2016 by astronomers Konstantin Batygin and Mike Brown at Caltech (the California Institute of Technology).
Their theory relates to the Kuiper Belt, a giant belt of dwarf planets, asteroids and other matter that lies beyond Neptune (and includes Pluto).
Many Kuiper Belt objects – also referred to as trans-Neptunian objects – have been discovered orbiting the Sun, but like Uranus, they don't do so in a continuous expected direction. Batygin and Brown argued that something with a large gravitational pull must be affecting their orbit, and proposed Planet Nine as a potential explanation.
This would be comparable to what happens with our own Moon. It orbits the Sun every 365.25 days, in line with what you would expect in view of their distance apart. However, the Earth's gravitational pull is such that the Moon also orbits the planet every 27 days. From the point of view of an outside observer, the Moon moves in a spiralling motion as a result. Similarly, many objects in the Kuiper Belt show signs of their orbits being affected by more than just the Sun's gravity.
While astronomers and space scientists were initially sceptical about the Planet Nine theory, there has been mounting evidence, thanks to increasingly powerful observations, that the orbits of trans-Neptunian objects are indeed erratic.
As Brown said in 2024, 'I think it is very unlikely that P9 does not exist. There are currently no other explanations for the effects that we see, nor for the myriad other P9-induced effects we see on the Solar System.'
In 2018, for example, it was announced that there was a new candidate for a dwarf planet orbiting the Sun, known as 2017 OF201. This object measures around 700km across (Earth is roughly 18x bigger) and has a highly elliptical orbit. This lack of a roughly circular orbit around the Sun suggested either an impact early in its lifetime that put it on this path, or gravitational influence from Planet Nine.
Problems with the theory
On the other hand, if Planet Nine exists, why hasn't anyone found it yet? Some astronomers question whether there's enough orbital data from Kuiper objects to justify any conclusions about its existence, while alternative explanations get put forward for their motion, such as the effect of a ring of debris or the more fantastical idea of a small black hole.
The biggest issue, however, is that the outer Solar System just hasn't been observed for long enough. For example, object 2017 OF201 has an orbital period of about 24,000 years. While an object's orbital path around the Sun can be found in a short number of years, any gravitational effects probably need four to five orbits to notice any subtle changes.
New discoveries of objects in the Kuiper Belt have also presented challenges for the Planet Nine theory. The latest is known as 2023 KQ14, an object discovered by the Subaru telescope in Hawaii.
It is known as a 'sednoid', meaning it spends most of its time far away from the Sun, though within the vast area in which the Sun has a gravitational pull (this area lies some 5,000AU or astronomical units away, where 1AU is the distance from the Earth to the Sun). The object's classification as a sednoid also means the gravitational influence of Neptune has little to no effect on it.
2023 KQ14's closest approach to the Sun is around 71AU away, while its furthest point is about 433AU. By comparison, Neptune is about 30AU away from the Sun. This new object is another with a very elliptical orbit, but it is more stable than 2017 OF201, which suggests that no large planet, including a hypothetical Planet Nine, is significantly affecting its path. If Planet Nine exists, it would therefore perhaps have to be farther than 500AU away from the Sun.
To make matters worse for the Planet Nine theory, this is the fourth sednoid to be discovered. The other three also exhibit stable orbits, similarly suggesting that any Planet Nine would have to be very far away indeed.
Nonetheless, the possibility remains that there could still be a massive planet affecting the orbits of bodies within the Kuiper Belt. But astronomers' ability to find any such planet remains somewhat limited by the restrictions of even unmanned space travel. It would take 118 years for a spacecraft to travel far enough away to find it, based on estimates from the speed of Nasa's New Horizons explorer.
This means we'll have to continue to rely on ground- and space-based telescopes to detect anything. New asteroids and distant objects are being discovered all the time as our observing capabilities become more detailed, which should gradually shed more light on what might be out there. So watch this (very big) space, and let's see what emerges in the coming years.
Ian Whittaker is a Senior Lecturer in Physics at Nottingham Trent University.
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Telegraph
3 hours ago
- Telegraph
World's biggest study of trans children to include toddlers treated by NHS
The world's biggest study of trans children will include toddlers treated by the NHS. Children who are under 18 and already being treated by an NHS gender clinic for 'gender incongruence' are to be eligible for a new research project which is being launched today by King's College London. The 2024 Cass review found that the youngest child referred to a gender identity service (GIDS) run by the NHS was three years old. All NHS patients under 18 at gender clinics will be eligible for enrolment in the new study. Around 3,000 children and young people are expected to take part with the first participants to be on board by early autumn. The Cass review found that referrals to gender clinics had grown exponentially in the last decade with three-quarters of patients born female, it also found many patients have mental health conditions and autism. The researchers running the Pathways Horizon project expect the findings to shed light on the links between these trends and help unpick any potential mechanism as well as improving treatments. The study will contain ten times as many children as the largest previous studies and the investigators hope the data will provide better information to support trans children, their families and clinicians. Participants will be recruited over 3.5 years and the programme is one of a suite of five projects that received £10.7million in total funding and will run until 2031. One of the sister research projects, Pathways Trial, is planning to look into the role of puberty suppressants on children with gender incongruence and the data will crossover with the Horizon project. This project has not yet been approved by ethics boards or regulators and is not yet underway. The Horizon study launching today is observational and will only follow trans children throughout their normal NHS care and will involve annual questionnaires on wellbeing, mental and physical health, relationships and gender identity. Some of the main goals of the work are to understand how prevalence of gender incongruence — defined as a marked and persistent split between an individual's experienced gender and assigned sex — changes depending on sex, neurodivergence, autism, ADHD and other conditions. Dr Michael Absoud, a consultant in Paediatric Neurodisability at King's College London and Deputy Chief Investigator of Horizons said doctors 'know too little' about how different treatments work for their patients. 'This is why we're launching the Pathways Horizons today — to help fill the evidence gap,' he said. 'We know that a significant number of young people referred to the gender services are also neurodivergent, particularly those with autism, ADHD, or other cognitive differences and this study will help, in the future, to understand how neurodivergence intersects and overlaps with gender-related distress, and whether different types of support are needed to meet the unique needs of these young people presenting to our services. 'Ultimately, our goal is to help and shape the future services to help children, improve child health, support families, and also clinicians.' Little reliable data There is relatively little reliable data from large studies that follow participants for several years specifically on trans children and this study is designed to fill this void. Professor Emily Simonoff, Professor of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry at King's College London and Chief Investigator of the study, said NHS England decided a study was needed to improve knowledge following the Cass review. 'We were tasked as a group to develop a robust program of research that would address questions raised in the Cass report,' she said. 'We were not told what to do. This is a study that we designed as a group of investigators.' The scientists are hoping the work will improve knowledge on the characteristics of people using youth gender services and also will compare the results of different treatment approaches while following the children in greater detail than ever before. 'More comprehensive' analysis Professor Richard Emsley, the study's statistician at King's College London, said the analysis will be more comprehensive than previous work. 'This will include first childhood experiences, social transitioning, neurodiversity such as autism and ADHD, and mental health symptoms including anxiety, depression, eating problems, and difficulty managing emotions,' he said. He added that the first papers from the trial will be published in a couple of years and will likely shed light on who is most likely to be using the NHS gender clinics as children. 'This includes their demographic characteristics, the prevalence of birth registered sex, and co-occurring conditions such as autism and ADHD.' He added: 'We won't be directly comparing different interventions. The best way to compare different interventions is in randomised control trials, but it will help us understand, for example, which groups of children and young people need more intensive input, which ones need less intensive input. 'It will help us to identify whether certain kinds of treatment packages seem to be more linked with good outcomes than others. 'That will allow us to develop further research in the future to pit interventions against each other or develop them in more detail.'


Edinburgh Reporter
17 hours ago
- Edinburgh Reporter
The astronomical sky over Edinburgh and Lothians in August
An invisible 'Black Moon' ghosts the sky in August plus Venus and Jupiter rise together. The Sun passes from Cancer (The Crab) on 10 August at 10:55 am and enters Leo (The Lion) but comes closer by 854,171 km. We emerge from perpetual astronomical twilight. Daylight shortens from 16:02 (16.038 hours) on 1 August to 13:54 (13.893 hours) on 31 August so we gain 2 hours and 9 minutes of night time, by the end of the month. The Moon begins the month in Virgo (The Maiden) and ends in Ophiuchus (The Serpent Bearer) but comes closer by 2,631 km. The first first quarter (sic) of the new Lunar cycle shows up on 1 August at 1:41 pm in Virgo (The Maiden). The first Lunar apogee (furthest from Earth) occurs on 1 August at 9:37 pm and takes the Moon to 404,201 km away from Earth—around 19,801 km further than average—subtending an angle of 29.6 arc-minutes. The full Sturgeon Moon makes an appearance on 9 August at 8:55 am in Capricornus (The Sea Goat). Lunar perigee (closest to Earth) on 14 August at 7:07 pm finds the Moon some 369,254 km away from Earth—around 15,146 km closer than average—subtending an angle of 32.4 arc-minutes. The Moon enters last quarter on 16 August at 6:12 am in Aries (The Ram). The new Moon appears on 23 August at 7:07 am in Leo (The Lion) beginning a new synodic (Lunar) month which will last 29 days, 13 hours and 48 minutes. This is an astronomical 'Black Moon' being defined as the 3rd new moon within the same astronomical season. The second Lunar apogee occurs on 29 August at 4:38 pm and takes the Moon to 404,585 km away from Earth—around 20,185 km further than average—subtending an angle of 29.5 arc-minutes. Finally, the second first quarter (sic) of the new Lunar cycle shows up on 31 August at 7:25 am in Scorpius (The Scorpion). For the inferior planets: Mercury begins the month in Cancer (The Crab) and ends in Leo (The Lion) but recedes by 93,949,967 km and, contrarily, increases in magnitude from 5.41 to -1.35 (509.25 times in brightness) over the month. Mercury's see-saw orbit sees it return to a prograde path from retrograde on 10 August and reach greatest western elongation on 19 August. The 'Swift Planet' closes out the month with another perihelion passage on 27 August. Meanwhile, Venus begins the month in Gemini (The Twins) and ends in Cancer (The Crab) but recedes by 28,990,238 km. Venus decreases in magnitude from -4.00 to -3.95 (1.05 times in brightness) over August. Between 6–18 August, Venus and Jupiter will rise side-by-side around 3 am in Gemini (The Twins). The optimum day will be 12 August when Venus will be 0.9 degrees south of Jupiter in the pre-dawn hours. 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Neptune remains in Pisces (The Fishes) and comes closer by 46,820,627 km. Observing Neptune requires binoculars or a telescope but it will lurk very close to Saturn all month. Our skymap shows how close they are in the south-east. If you are still unsure of how to find the elusive 'Blue Planet', try using the waning gibbous Moon on 13 August at 1:30 am to find Saturn: Neptune will then be about 1 degree north. The Perseid (007 PER) meteor shower is one of the most active of the year and peak overnight on 12/13 August with up to 100 shooting stars per hour. The radiant point is close to the principal star, Mirfak. This year, however, the 82% illuminated waning gibbous Moon will hamper observing. The parent comet is 109P/Swift-Tuttle discovered in 1862 but last seeding the meteor shower in In the Catholic church they are called the 'Tears of Saint Lawrence' because mourners first saw these shooting stars when carrying the saint's body (after he had been martyred by roasting over hot coals). 10 August is also the saint's feast day. Within Perseus (The Hero) is the 3-solar radii star Algol—sometimes unfavorably named the 'Demon Star'—whose surface temperature is 12,500 Kelvin lying at some 90 light years. It was discovered to be variable in 1667 but the reason behind the variability was not explained until the late 19th century when it was discovered to be the first ever eclipsing binary. The companion star is slightly bigger but fainter and lies less than 10 million km away. As these 2 stars rotate around their barycentre, they eclipse each other with the larger occultation dimming the magnitude from 2.1 to 3.4 over a 10-hour period. This eclipse takes place every 2.867 days but the secondary eclipse is too faint for the naked eye. Today, we know that Algol is actually a triple star system but the third companion is much fainter and much further away from the 2 principal components. You may read about the newly discovered comet 3I/ATLAS (C/2025 N1) which is designated as an 'interstellar object' (ISO). It is the fastest ISO ever discovered and, being an interstellar object, it comes from another planetary system inside our galaxy. By studying this comet in detail in the coming months, astronomers will get a fix on the chemistry and physics in potential exoplanet systems. Although it is moving fast, around 68 km/s, it will not come anywhere near Earth but will fly-by tantalizingly close to Mars. It emanates from Sagittarius (The Archer) and appears as if he has aimed a 'free sample return mission' our way! At the time of our sky map, some constellations visible are Cepheus (The King) at zenith, Lynx (The Lynx) in the north, Andromeda (The Chained Maiden) in the east, Corona Borealis (The Northern Crown) in the west (which contains our, so far, elusive recurrent nova known as the Blaze star) and Microscopium (The Microscope) in the south. The ecliptic hosts Taurus (The Bull), Aries (The Ram), Pisces (The Fishes), Aquarius (The Water Bearer), Capricorn (The Sea Goat) and Sagittarius (The Archer). The 'Summer Triangle'—Vega in Lyra (The Lyre), Altair in Aquila (The Eagle) and Deneb in Cygnus (The Swan)—is prominent at high altitude in the south. Also, highly visible in the east is the great square of Pegasus (The Winged Horse) with the sentinel stars Scheat, Alpheratz, Algenib and Markab. Circumpolar constellations—always above the horizon—include Camelopardalis (The Giraffe), Cassiopeia (The Seated Queen), Draco (The Dragon) and Ursa Major (The Great Bear). Like this: Like Related

Rhyl Journal
a day ago
- Rhyl Journal
Wych elms grown in bid to save rare white-letter hairstreak
Denbighshire County Council's biodiversity team has grown more than 1,800 of the under-threat trees at its tree nursery in St Asaph to support the white-letter hairstreak butterfly, which relies on wych elms to survive. Wych elms have declined sharply due to Dutch elm disease, and the loss has put the butterfly at further risk since its larvae feed exclusively on the tree's unopened flower buds. Sam Brown, tree nursery assistant, said: "We are really pleased we have been able to grow nearly 2,000 wych elms here at the nursery as the future of the tree has been threatened by Dutch elms disease and a reluctance to replant the tree. "Not only that, this tree goes hand in hand with putting food out there for an extremely rare butterfly and having this number that will be planted out on the Green Gates Nature Reserve will go a long way to encouraging white-letter hairstreaks to turn their decline around." The trees were grown from seeds collected at Loggerheads Country Park last year and will be planted at the nearby Green Gates Nature Reserve. The project is funded by the Welsh Government's Local Places for Nature grant and forms part of the council's work with the Local Nature Partnership. Mr Brown said: "It's so important to reverse the loss of trees and habitats by climate change and human action. "The wych elm is perfect as plants and trees all play their part in providing a vital food source for insects and animals. "The less and less there are in Denbighshire, the more at risk our local nature becomes." The white-letter hairstreak was last recorded at Loggerheads several years ago and remains scarce across Denbighshire. The council hopes that reintroducing flowering wych elms will provide the essential food source needed to help the butterfly return and thrive in the area.