Tyche may be bigger than Jupiter and orbit at the outer edge of the solar system
Sunday, 13 February 2011
 If you grew up thinking there were nine planets and were shocked when Pluto    was demoted five years ago, get ready for another surprise. There may be    nine after all, and Jupiter may not be the largest. 
 The hunt is on for a gas giant up to four times the mass of Jupiter thought to    be lurking in the outer Oort Cloud, the most remote region of the solar    system. The orbit of Tyche (pronounced ty-kee), would be 15,000 times    farther from the Sun than the Earth's, and 375 times farther than Pluto's,    which is why it hasn't been seen so far.  
 But scientists now believe the proof of its existence has already been    gathered by a Nasa space telescope, Wise, and is just waiting to be    analysed. 
 The first tranche of data is to be released in April, and astrophysicists John    Matese and Daniel Whitmire from the University of Louisiana at Lafayette    think it will reveal Tyche within two years. "If it does, John and I    will be doing cartwheels," Professor Whitmire said. "And that's    not easy at our age." 
 Once Tyche has been located, other telescopes could be pointed at it to    confirm the discovery.  
 Whether it would become the new ninth planet would be decided by the    International Astronomical Union (IAU). The main argument against is that    Tyche probably formed around another star and was later captured by the    Sun's gravitational field. The IAU may choose to create a whole new category    for Tyche, Professor Matese said.  
 The IAU would also have the final say about the gas giant's name. To the    Greeks, Tyche was the goddess responsible for the destiny of cities. Her    name was provisionally chosen in reference to an earlier hypothesis, now    largely abandoned, that the Sun might be part of a binary star system with a    dim companion, tentatively called Nemesis, that was thought responsible for    mass extinctions on Earth. In myth, Tyche was the good sister of Nemesis.  
 Tyche will almost certainly be made up mostly of hydrogen and helium and will    probably have an atmosphere much like Jupiter's, with colourful spots and    bands and clouds, Professor Whitmire said. "You'd also expect it to    have moons. All the outer planets have them," he added.  
 What will make it stand out in the Wise data is its temperature, predicted to    be around -73C, four or five times warmer than Pluto. "The heat is left    over from its formation," Professor Whitmire said. "It takes an    object this size a long time to cool off."  
 Most of the billions of objects in the Oort Cloud – a sphere one light year in    radius stretching a quarter of the distance to Alpha Centauri, the brightest    star in the southern constellation – are lumps of dirty ice at temperatures    much closer to absolute zero (-273C).  
 A few of these are dislodged from their orbits by the galactic tide – the    combined gravitational pull from the billions of stars towards the centre of    the Milky Way – and start the long fall into the inner solar system.  
 As these long-period comets get closer to the Sun, some of the ice boils off,    forming the characteristic tails that make them visible.  
 Professors Matese and Whitmire first proposed the existence of Tyche to    explain why many of these long-period comets were coming from the wrong    direction. In their latest paper, published in the February issue of Icarus,    the international journal of solar system studies, they report that more    than 20 per cent too many of the long-period comets observed since 1898    arrive from a band circling the sky at a higher angle than predicted by the    galactic-tide theory.  
 No other proposal has been put forward to explain this anomaly since it was    first suggested 12 years ago. But the Tyche hypothesis does have one flaw.    Conventional theory holds that the gas giant should also dislodge comets    from the inner Oort Cloud, but these have not been observed.  
 Professor Matese suggests this may be because these comets have already been    tugged out of their orbits and, after several passes through the inner solar    system, have faded to the point that they are much harder to detect.  
 So if it is real, Tyche may not only be disrupting the orbits of comets, it    may also overturn an established scientific theory.  
 You can download a PDF showing the position of Tyche by clicking here     


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