The Independent | 2011 Feb 13
Search on for Tyche, believed to be largest planet in the solar systemTyche may be bigger than Jupiter and orbit at the outer edge of the solar system
The Daily Mail | 2011 Feb 14
The Mystery of the Giant Planet Hidden In Our Solar SystemLargest planet in the solar system could be about to be discovered - and it's up to four times the size of Jupiter
Gizmodo | 2011 Feb 14
No, there’s no proof of a giant planet in the outer solar systemThere's a giant planet right here, hiding in our Solar System. One that nobody has ever seen, even while it is four times larger than Jupiter and has rings and moons orbiting it. At least, that's what two astrophysicists say.
Discover Blogs | Bad Astronomy | 2011 Feb 14
Astronomers Doubt Giant Planet 'Tyche' Exists in Our Solar SystemI’m getting a lot of email and tweets about NASA supposedly having proof of a giant, Jupiter-sized planet orbiting the Sun way beyond Pluto. Let me be clear: while certainly possible, this idea is not at all proven, and in my opinion still pretty unlikely. As usual, this started as a more-or-less accurate media story and is getting inflated as it gets re-reported. As far as I can tell, the original report was in the UK paper The Independent.
Here’s the deal. Two astronomers, John Matese and Dan Whitmire, have theorized about the possibility of a previously-undiscovered planet way beyond Pluto for some time. This is not a crazy idea; we see planets orbiting other stars way out, and there’s other evidence big planets can be pretty far out from the Sun (mind you, evidence does not mean proof). As it happens, there are lots of chunks of ice orbiting the Sun pretty far out as well. Some of these have orbits which bring them into the inner solar system, and we seem them as long-period comets.
What Matese and Whitmire did was wonder how a big planet would affect the orbits of these comets. If you measured enough of them, would you see the effects of the gravity of this planet? They claim you can, and even gave the planet a tentative name: Tyche.
I read their papers, and thought the data were interesting but unconvincing. The sample size was too small. A bigger study was done, but again the effects weren’t quite enough to rise to the level of breakthrough. I’m not saying the astronomers are wrong — the data were certainly provocative, and potentially correct! Just not firm enough.
What I want to see are observations of this planet. And our best hope may be in the NASA satellite WISE — the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer, which has scanned the entire sky over the past year or so. A planet in the outer solar system may be warm enough to glow in the IR and be spotted in the WISE data.
The article in The Independent talks about this, saying:Note that first line: it makes it seem as if the proof of the planet is already in the data. We just need to find it!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."
But that’s not really the case. This planet may not exist at all. It might, and I’d love for that to be true. But at the moment we just have interesting but inconclusive evidence supporting the idea of a large planet in the deep dark recesses of the solar system. That’s a long way from proof.
I’ll note the popular site Gizmodo has an article on this that starts off well, but then goes even farther than the Independent did: "[Matese and Whitmire] claim that data already captured by NASA’s Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer proves its existence. It only needs to be analyzed… over the next two years".
The Independent said that the astronomers believe the proof is there, but that’s different than actually claiming it’s there. I think the article in The Independent is fairly well-measured, but Gizmodo took it a bit too far. And in either case, I’m quite sure that lay people reading these articles will walk away thinking the planet’s reality is a given.
But at this point, we don’t know. And it’s possible that the planet exists and WISE won’t see it; it may be too dim to spot. There are many variations here. Basically it boils down to only one statement that can be said with certainty: if WISE sees it, it exists. But if it’s not seen in the WISE data, that doesn’t prove anything one way or another; it narrows the possibilities down and gives us an upper limit on how big, distant, and warm the planet might be. But we’d need to keep looking for it.
There’s been a spate of overblown stories dealing with astronomy lately. I think this is a coincidence, but it’s certainly keeping me busy. And I’m still not done yet. Stay tuned.
Space.com | Natalie Wolchover | Life's Little Mysteries | 2011 feb 15
Does a Massive Planet Lurk in the Outer Solar System?A duo of planetary astronomers has grabbed media attention by claiming a planet four times the size of Jupiter may be lurking in the outer solar system. They call the planet Tyche.
Many astronomers, however, say it probably isn't there.
The claim by John Matese and Daniel Whitmire of the University of Lousiana-Lafayette is not new: They have been making a case for Tyche since 1999, suggesting that the giant planet's presence in a far-flung region of solar system called the Oort cloud would explain the unusual orbital paths of some comets that originate there.
"There's evidence that some Oort cloud comets display orbital peculiarities," Matese said. "We're saying that perhaps the pattern is indicative that there's a planet there."
Although their argument is similar to the one they originally made, "what's new is that this pattern has persisted," Matese told Life's Little Mysteries. "It's possible that it's a statistical fluke, but that likelihood has lessened as more data has accumulated in the past 10 years."
Matese says NASA's WISE telescope may have already collected infrared data from Tyche that would be hard to pick out from within the telescope's immense database.
"The spectrum we have predicted is uncertain, and there may be a great many signals that are similar to what are expected for our object. So this may take time," Matese said. It could be two years before a signal from Tyche — if it's there — is located, he added.
Not everyone is as optimistic.
Required: 'Incredible proof'
Matthew Holman, a planetary scientist at the Harvard Smithsonian Institute of Astrophysics, is not a Tyche believer.
Though he hasn't read the latest version of Matese's and Whitmire's argument, Holman told Life's Little Mysteries, "Based on past papers that I've seen looking at where long-period comets came from in the sky, and finding signatures of large perturbers of the Oort cloud, I was not persuaded by the evidence."
Hal Levison, a planetary scientist at the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colo., who recently authored a paper on the Oort cloud for Science Magazine, seconded that opinion.
"I haven't read this version of his paper, which he claims now has better statistics than the previous attempts, where he also claimed that he saw evidence of this object," Levison said. "But in previous papers, I really think he did his statistics wrong. Incredible claims require incredible proof and I really believe that he doesn't understand how to do this statistical analysis correctly."
"What Matese claims is that he sees an excess of comets coming from a particular place, which he attributes to the gravitational effects of a large planet in the Oort cloud. I have nothing against the idea, but I think the signal that he claims he sees is very subtle, and I'm not sure it's statistically significant," Levison told Life's Little Mysteries.
"There's another group in England that claims the same thing, but with Jupiter on the other side of the sun," Levison said. "And they also claim to explain the excess of comets."
As always, it's difficult to prove or disprove anything that you can't see or touch, but for now, considering that most astronomers aren't even sure that such an excess of comets exists in the first place, it may be too early to get psyched about Tyche.
Discovery News | Ian O'Neill | 2011 Feb 16
Persistent evidence of a jovian mass solar companion in the Oort cloud - JJ Matese, DP WhitmireThere's a planet, possibly four times the mass of Jupiter, composed of hydrogen and helium, potentially with a system of moons, hiding in the furthest-most reaches of the solar system. That's according to two University of Louisiana scientists anyway.
No, the sun's evil twin Nemesis hasn't been found, and the pretend purveyor of doom, Planet X, hasn't been spotted either. This is a different kind of world, possibly as complex and interesting as Jupiter, but living in a region of space that is as mysterious as the world itself.
Dubbed "Tyche," this hypothetical planet is causing a small buzz. If it does exist, the confirmed number of planets in our solar system would grow back to nine (sorry Pluto, you're still a dwarf planet) and Jupiter would be relegated to second fiddle.
What's more, the International Astronomical Union (IAU) might need to create a new planetary class for this object, as it would have most likely formed around another star, only to have been kidnapped by the sun's gravity eons ago.
Oort Cloud Hide-and-Seek
Astrophysicists John Matese and Daniel Whitmire from the University of Louisiana at Lafayette arrived at this theory after analyzing comets passing through the inner solar system. They found that many of the comets had strange orbits, contradicting widely accepted cometary theories.
Matese and Whitmire have been trying to track down Tyche since 1999 and it's their belief that there must be a massive world crawling through the outer Oort cloud.
The Oort cloud is a hypothetical volume of space encapsulating our entire solar system and is thought to be the birth place of the long-period comets we see speed through our solar system. It's unimaginably vast, well beyond our heliosphere, up to around 1 light-year distant. That's a quarter of the way to the next star.
Comets are thought to have formed in the Oort cloud since the birth of the solar system and, occasionally, they get disturbed by the gravity of a passing star, causing them to plunge toward the sun, like a high diver jumping off the platform toward the pool below.
But say if Tyche is living in the Oort cloud, stirring things up? That might be causing the oddities spotted in some long-period comets.
"Ordinary Evidence"
Interestingly, as a gas giant of this size is so massive, it would be emitting some heat as it slowly cools since being formed (in a similar fashion to Jupiter), so it could give away its location if its infrared emissions are detected. The researchers are therefore looking to analyze data from NASA's Wide-Field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) to find Tyche.
Before we get too excited about the possibility of an imminent historic announcement, it turns out that the majority of the astronomical community isn't particularly confident about Tyche's existence.
Ned Wright, principal investigator for the WISE mission, told Discovery News that the theory behind Tyche is based on "ordinary evidence for an extraordinary claim."
Regardless, as WISE continues to catalog a vast number of infrared sources throughout the cosmos, the mission will keep an eye open for any oddities in the Oort cloud.
"Matese and Whitmire have recently extended the mass range of their prediction down to [the mass of Jupiter] and that is getting a bit hard for WISE to detect at 0.5 light-years from Earth, so we will have to do a careful analysis of lots of faint sources to be sure we haven't missed something," Wright said.
"It should take another couple of years before we can be sure."
Comet Statistics
Dave Jewitt, professor at UCLA and PAN-STARRS scientist, is no stranger to solar system detective work and isn't overly enthusiastic about Matese and Whitmire's theory either.
"This claim is based on the statistics of comet arrivals and the argument that there is an unexpected concentration of comets that results from an unseen planet far beyond the planetary region," Jewitt explained.
According to Jewitt, new claims about the reasons behind comet clustering appear every few years, and while this clustering is interesting, observational bias could be leading us to believe there is something causing Oort cloud asymmetries (i.e. clusters of comets), rather than it being a real phenomenon.
"For example, most people live in the northern hemisphere, so it is easier to detect comets on that side of the earth than on the other, southern side," he said. "The result is that we have biased, noisy comet counts that make discerning comet excesses very tricky."
Jewitt would rather wait until WISE data can prove or disprove Tyche's existence, rather than drawing too many conclusions from comet statistics.
"People have short memories and this is one of those recurrent stories that seems to be attractive to the web surfing population again and again," Jewitt said. "A distant Jupiter is certainly on the cards, in terms of what we know about the structure, origin and evolution of the solar system, but that's because we are largely ignorant about the huge space in the solar system much beyond Neptune."
"We can't rule it out yet. But WISE should have the data to soon rule it out, or to show that it's real."
- Icarus 211(2) 926 (Feb 2011) DOI: 10.1016/j.icarus.2010.11.009
arXiv.org > astro-ph > arXiv:1004.4584 > 26 Apr 2010
- Icarus 141(2) 324 (Oct 1999) DOI: 10.1006/icar.1999.6177 (pdf)
Universe Today | Nancy Atkinson | 2011 Feb 16