List of hypothetical Solar System objects

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

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

Moons

  • 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.
  • .
  • 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.[31]

Stars

  • 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.[32]
  • 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.[32]
  • One assumption suggests that the hypothetical Planet Nine is actually a primordial black hole.[33]

See also

References

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  20. ^ "New planet found in our Solar System?". National Geographic. 2012. Archived from the original on May 14, 2012. Retrieved 2012-05-21.
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  23. ^ 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.
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  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
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  29. ^ "There might be an ice giant planet hiding in our solar system". 27 June 2023.
  30. .
  31. ^ Hypothetical Planets
  32. ^ 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
  33. ^ "Planet Nine may be a black hole the size of a baseball". October 2019.