sb.scorecardresearch

Published 09:34 IST, July 13th 2020

Tiny black hole or 'Planet 9'? Scientists theorise on gravitational influence beyond Pluto

Scientists have theorised the presence of a gravitationally relevant object interacting with others on the edge of the solar system, suggesting options

Reported by: Riya Baibhawi
Follow: Google News Icon
  • share
Black Hole or Planet 9? Mysterious object discovered at the edge of solar system
null | Image: self

Scientists have theorised the presence of a gravitationally relevant object interacting with others on the edge of the solar system, and while many have proposed the theory of 'planet nine' to explain this, others want to find out if it is a tiny planet-mass black hole. According to researchers, the observation of other objects close to it suggests that there was something big generating gravitational pull.

Researchers at Harvard University in partnership with the Black Hole initiative have expressed a desire to test if the object lurking in the system is actually such a 'primordial' black hole. For the purpose of research, they could study the data from Legacy Survey of Space Time ( LASST)  as evidence as acceleration flares, which are created when objects get too close to black hole.

Read: Barcelona's $2bn Transfer Black Hole In Danger Of Trapping WC Winner Antoine Griezmann

Read: Researchers Find 'hungry' Black Hole That Gobbles Up One Sun Every Day

“In the vicinity of a black hole, small bodies that approach it will melt as a result of heating from the background accretion of gas from the interstellar medium onto the black hole,” Amir Siraj of Harvard said in a statement.

Waiting for LASST

Meanwhile, Avi Loeb, co-author of the study, said that once they melt, small bodies are subjected to total disruption by the black hole, followed by accretion from the tidally disrupted body onto the black hole.  However, the LASST hasn’t begun yet but the scientists believe that the survey would be able to spot such flares. Therefore, they still do not know when the hardware would begin scanning the sky.

A 'planet-mass' black hole could exist with a mass of between five and ten times that of our own planet. Being a black hole, the object would be much, much smaller than Earth, and the researchers suggest it could be as tiny as an orange, though that is not an indictment of its gravitational power.

Read: Mysterious Circular Objects Spotted Orbiting Milky Way's Supermassive Black Hole, See Pics

Read: Powerful Telescopes Can Spot The 'Photon Ring' Of The First Imaged Black Hole

Representative image,  Credits: NASA

Updated 09:34 IST, July 13th 2020