时间:2026-01-07 15:09:03 来源:网络整理编辑:熱點
Calling all space fans: Astronomers want you to help them hunt for a large planet that might be lurk
Calling all space fans: Astronomers want you to help them hunt for a large planet that might be lurking on the outskirts of our solar system.。
Scientists working with a number of institutions have created a website filled with data that will allow people to hunt for previously undiscovered objects circling the sun from beyond Neptune's orbit.。
SEE ALSO:Scientists want you to help them find planets in this database of stars 。The website, called Backyard Worlds: Planet 9, asks people to look through flipbooks of images to try to find "failed stars," known as brown dwarfs, or even the elusive "Planet 9" -- a theoretical planet thought to circle the sun from the reaches of the solar system.。
Backyard Worlds: Planet 9 should help add to the automated searches for these objects already underway.。

“Automated searches don’t work well in some regions of the sky, like the plane of the Milky Way galaxy, because there are too many stars, which confuses the search algorithm,” Berkeley scientist Aaron Meisner said in a statement. 。
“Backyard Worlds: Planet 9 has the potential to unlock once-in-a-century discoveries, and it’s exciting to think they could be spotted first by a citizen scientist,” Meisner added. 。
The new website uses processed data from NASA's WISE telescope to allow citizen scientists to see even the dimmest objects moving out there in the solar system. 。
Thanks for signing up! 。A diagram of where Planet 9 might be.Credit: CALTECH/R. HURT (IPAC)。
For decades, scientists have wondered if there might be some kind of large object orbiting the sun past Pluto. Last year, however, astronomers Mike Brown and Konstantin Batygin found indirect evidence that actually suggests this world exists. 。
Brown and Batygin thinks the Neptune-sized world probably completes a full circuit of the sun every 15,000 years. 。
The team of Caltech scientists think they have compelling evidence for the existence of the world because about six objects they studied in the Kuiper Belt -- the icy mass of objects in Pluto's part of space -- all seem to have orbits perturbed in the same way. 。
"It's almost like having six hands on a clock all moving at different rates, and when you happen to look up, they're all in exactly the same place," Brown said in a statement in January 2016.。
"Basically it shouldn't happen randomly. So we thought something else must be shaping these orbits." 。
Whether the planet is found or not, Backyard Worlds should help speed up the process in some way.。
The website will also help citizen scientists find any brown dwarfs that might be relatively close our sun. These "failed stars" are basically objects that are too big to be considered planets, but too small to be stars.。
Dramatic photo captures nun texting friends after Italy earthquake2026-01-07 14:44
Motorola aims to take on Samsung's Galaxy S20 Ultra with its Edge+2026-01-07 14:28
Apple settles FaceTime class2026-01-07 14:24
Xbox Series X trademark application reveals new console logo2026-01-07 14:11
Sound the alarms: Simone Biles finally met Zac Efron2026-01-07 14:06
You can transfer Facebook photos and videos to Google Photos now2026-01-07 14:01
You can't kill coronavirus. That's OK.2026-01-07 13:44
Phoebe Waller2026-01-07 13:29
U.S. government issues warning on McDonald's recalled wearable devices2026-01-07 12:58
You can't kill coronavirus. That's OK.2026-01-07 12:37
Make money or go to Stanford? Katie Ledecky is left with an unfair choice.2026-01-07 14:58
Coronavirus outbreak empties out airports around the world2026-01-07 14:34
IRS announces May 13 deadline for direct deposit of stimulus checks2026-01-07 14:24
You can transfer Facebook photos and videos to Google Photos now2026-01-07 14:23
Two astronauts just installed a new parking spot on the International Space Station2026-01-07 13:45
Coronavirus outbreak pushes LG out of Mobile World Congress2026-01-07 13:14
Elon Musk wasn't kidding, he's actually selling his houses2026-01-07 13:03
'No Time To Die' release delayed until November due to coronavirus2026-01-07 12:38
Darth Vader is back. Why do we still care?2026-01-07 12:37
U.S. wireless carriers face $200 million in FCC fines for mishandling customer data2026-01-07 12:25