new planetoid in our solar system

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  • Ally_Kat
    ROTH ARMY SUPREME
    • Jan 2004
    • 7608

    new planetoid in our solar system

    Distant 'Planetoid' Seen in Our Solar System

    Mar 15, 3:50 PM (ET)

    By Deborah Zabarenko
    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Astronomers have discovered the coldest and most distant object ever found in the solar system, a dark and frigid world a bit smaller than Pluto and three times farther away.

    The new "planetoid," named Sedna after an Inuit goddess who created Arctic sea creatures, is more than 8 billion miles from the sun and never gets above minus 400 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 240 Celsius), astronomers said on Monday.

    "The sun appears so small from that distance that you could completely block it out with the head of a pin," said Mike Brown, an astronomer at California Institute of Technology, who led the research team.

    Sedna is one of the reddest objects in the solar system, after Mars, and takes 10,500 years to travel its highly elliptical path around the sun.

    Brown and the other astronomers detected Sedna on Nov. 14 during a survey of the outer solar system. As they peered into space, they saw stationary stars and other cosmic bodies, and a very slowly moving object that turned out to be Sedna.

    "Anything that moves very slowly across the sky, we know it's something in the solar system: a satellite, a planet, an asteroid," Brown said at a telephone news conference. "But this is the most slowly moving object we've ever seen moving across the sky, and we knew it must be something very far away."

    As distant and cold as Sedna is now, its orbit around the sun takes it more than 10 times further, to a distance of 84 billion miles.

    Sedna revolves once every 40 days, a slow revolution that suggests it might have a moon slowing its twirl, Brown said.

    To check this, he and his team plan to use the Hubble Space Telescope, which is peerless at looking at distant objects that appear close together or even fused and determining whether they are separate.

    PLANETOID, BUT NO PLANET

    Sedna is part of the solar system, but that doesn't mean it's a planet, according to Brian Marsden, director of the Minor Planet Center of the International Astronomical Union.

    "I think it would be misleading to call it the 10th planet," Marsden said in a telephone interview. "Just as I think it's misleading to call Pluto the ninth planet."

    To be called planets, astronomical objects must be a certain size, and Pluto is at the lower limit of planetary dimensions, Marsden said. They also must "participate" in the events of the solar system, and there again, he feels Pluto does not qualify -- its orbit is neither circular nor in the same plane as the other planets.

    Since Sedna is smaller and far more eccentric in its path than Pluto, Marsden questioned its potential planetary status. Brown echoed this assessment, and even seconded Marsden's opinion that Pluto is no planet.

    Marsden questioned the planetoid's suggested name, given by its discoverers and not yet approved by the astronomical union. The formal designation for Sedna is 2003VB12.

    First detected with the Samuel Oschin Telescope near San Diego, California, Sedna was observed within days on telescopes from Chile to Spain, Arizona and Hawaii.

    NASA's new orbiting Spitzer Space Telescope, which looks at the universe with infrared detectors that peer through cosmic dust, was also trained on the distant object.

    The Spitzer scope found that Sedna probably has about three-fourths the diameter of Pluto, which would make it the biggest object found in the solar system since Pluto's discovery in 1930.
    Roth Army Militia
  • Little Texan
    Full Member Status

    • Jan 2004
    • 4579

    #2
    I don't know why they don't just use the Hubble to take images of Pluto, as well. They've never gotten a closeup picture of Pluto.

    Comment

    • alexpgrimes
      Foot Soldier
      • Jan 2004
      • 731

      #3
      You mean they've finally found spammies home planet?
      If I want any shit out of you, I'll squeeze your head.

      Comment

      • Junyore Grades
        Roadie
        • Jan 2004
        • 151

        #4
        Pluto was just discovered 1930?? I did not know that.
        http://img.villagephotos.com/p/2004-...ertificate.jpg

        Comment

        • Mr Grimsdale
          ROTH ARMY SUPREME
          • Jan 2004
          • 8905

          #5
          he appeared in the movies shortly afterwards

          oooh no missus no
          Originally posted by flappo
          i'm sure grimsdale's on drugs

          Originally posted by Cato
          translating your Japanese.


          "Master Cato is...I order, it's yours. don't ask me to do gay material for the life of me because you kick my bat."

          omae baka dana?

          Comment

          • Eyes of the Night
            Veteran
            • Jan 2004
            • 1993

            #6
            Cool read there AK ...


            Broken down n' dirty dressed in rags ...

            Comment

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