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originally posted by: Somethingsamiss
a reply to: Somethingsamiss
Here is one artical i read.
www.nzherald.co.nz...
originally posted by: Reverbs
a reply to: Somethingsamiss
They've been looking for planet x since before I was born and I'm in my 30s
When IRAS was launched in like 83? 84? They hoped to maybe catch planet ex's heat signature..
The reason they thought something was out there originally were abnormalities in Neptune And Uranus orbits.
New York Times 1983
Pluto was found in 1930 and they were like gotcha planet x but it wasn't big enough so they kept looking..
So yea it's been an idea for a long time.
originally posted by: eriktheawful
a reply to: LSU0408
Because they are basically looking for what will be a couple of pixels that moves against the background of stars, and it will be moving very, very slowly compared to even Pluto.
It could also be highly inclined to the plane of the solar system.
There will also be false ones (a comet, a asteroids, a kuiper belt object that ends up being too small to be it, etc) that have to be discounted.
Last is: the amount of sky you have to search for it.
originally posted by: LSU0408
originally posted by: Somethingsamiss
a reply to: Somethingsamiss
Here is one artical i read.
www.nzherald.co.nz...
If they're looking for a planet that's yet to be found because it's so far away, I don't understand why we can't use our technology to expand our horizons and put a satellite transmitted telescope on Mars to get a closer look, or even Ganymede... Have a shuttle use the moon's gravity to swing back around to Earth, then use Earth's gravity to swing back around to the moon, then finally swing around Mars on the final push for speed and then launch the craft with the telescope. Should be plenty fast by then.
originally posted by: Barcs
a reply to: LSU0408
Well, there is a plan in the works to launch a new satellite telescope into orbit (earth's orbit) in 2018. Supposedly the new one will have much greater capabilities than the Kepler or Hubble. Perhaps that will aid us in actually getting a good shot of the planet. It wouldn't surprise me at all if it turned out to be a brown Dwarf.
Heck, maybe one of the Voyager probes will accidentally discover it at some point, but the chances of that are very slim, I admit.
originally posted by: Soylent Green Is People
I don't think mainstream astronomer (nor NASA, but they aren't really the only astronomical science authority, not even in this country) ever "denied" the potential existence of a planet beyond Pluto. That has always been a possibility in the eyes of astronomers (and NASA, for that matter) of another planet out there.
Astronomers may have not had any solid evidence of such a planet until now, but that doesn't mean they didn't think it was possible, and there has always been a part of mainstream astronomy that has always been actively searching for another planet.
originally posted by: wildespace
originally posted by: Pathaka
as it has a mass of 1000x mass of Jupiter.
Except it doesn't. Not even 1000x mass of Earth. It would probably be more like Neptune, which has 17x mass of Earth.