Wednesday, November 11, 2015

Discover the most distant object in the solar system – The Universal

Astronomers have discovered what appears to be the most distant object ever detected in the Plot System, located three times farther than Pluto and named by scientists as V774104 .

This is a dwarf planet between 500 and a thousand kilometers in diameter, whose orbit will not be clarified until within a year, as announced this week its discoverers in annual meeting of the American Astronomical Society held outside Washington.

“We can not explain the orbits of these objects as we know about the solar system,” said Scott Sheppard, an astronomer at the Carnegie Institution Science who led the team of scientists who made the discovery.

The V774104 is currently 15 thousand 400 million kilometers from the sun, or 103 astronomical units (AU) away, ie 103 times the distance between Earth and the sun.

The purpose of the farthest solar system found so far was the dwarf planet Eris, discovered in 2005, which has a moon named Dysnomia and located about 14 thousand 500 million kilometers from the sun.

The professor of astronomy at Cornell University (New York) Joseph Burns said that this discovery is “another example” of the Solar System is larger than previously thought.

“We need a little more time to refine the orbit and determine the exact size of the object, but it must be great to be at this distance,” said the expert.

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