2014 FE72

2014 FE72

Orbits of 2014 FE72 (green) and other detached objects

Orbits of 2014 FE72 (green) and other scattered/detached objects, along with hypothetical Planet Nine on the right
Discovery[1]
Discovered by Scott Sheppard,
Chad Trujillo
Discovery date 26 March 2014
Designations
MPC designation 2014 FE72
SDO
Orbital characteristics[2]
Epoch 31 July 2016 (JD 2457600.5)
Uncertainty parameter 5
Observation arc 623 days
Aphelion 3800±2800 AU
Perihelion 36.34±0.22 AU
1900±1400 AU
Eccentricity 0.981±0.014
86000±93000 yr
0.21±0.23°
 0m 0.041s ± 0° 0m 0.045s/ day
Inclination 20.5969±0.0059°
336.765±0.011°
134.43±0.12°
Earth MOID 35.39 AU
Jupiter MOID 31.28 AU
Physical characteristics
Dimensions ~270 km (based on assumed albedo)[3]
~170–380 km (based on possible albedo range of 0.25–0.05)[2][4]
0.08 (assumed)[3]
6.08±0.17

    2014 FE72 is a trans-Neptunian object[2] and possible dwarf planet,[3] a member of the scattered disc, whose orbit extends into the inner Oort cloud.[1] Discovered by Scott Sheppard and Chad Trujillo, the object's existence was revealed on 29 August 2016.[1][5]

    Orbit

    Its elongated orbit (eccentricity = 0.98) has a perihelion of 36.3 AU, an aphelion of ~4,000 AU and an orbital period of ~90,000 years.[2] The latter values are about 4 times and 8 times, respectively, those of Sedna, and the largest known for any Solar System body that is not a long-period comet. However, given the short observation arc and extreme eccentricity, these values are also poorly determined.[2]

    2014 FE72 last passed through perihelion around late 1965; as of 29 August 2016, it was 61.4 AU from the Sun.[2]

    Most-distant known objects in the
    Solar System as of 10 October 2016[6]
    Object name Distance from the Sun (AU) Apparent
    magnitude
    Absolute
    magnitude
    (H)
    Current Perihelion Aphelion
    V774104 103 N/A N/A 24 4
    Eris 96.2 37.8 97.6 18.7 -1.2
    2014 UZ224 91.6 38.0 179.8 23.2 3.5
    2007 OR10 87.6 33.0 100.8 21.7 2.5
    2013 FS28 86.2 34.6 347.6 24.5 4.9
    Sedna 85.6 76.0 939 21.0 1.6
    2014 FC69 84.4 40.3 106.9 24.1 4.6
    2006 QH181 83.6 37.8 96.7 23.6 4.3
    2012 VP113 83.3 80.5 438 23.4 4.0
    2013 FY27 80.2 36.1 81.8 22.1 3.0
    2014 FJ72 71.1 38.7 152.2 24.2 5.6
    2010 GB174 71.1 48.7 693 25.1 6.5
    2012 FH84 68.6 45.8 80.6 25.7 7.3
    2011 GM89 68.3 37.2 68.8 25.6 7.1
    2015 GR50 68.2 35.6 78.6 25.1 6.7
    2015 GP50 68.1 35.9 89.1 24.8 6.5
    2013 FQ28 67.5 48.7 80.6 24.4 6.0
    2013 UJ15 64.4 36.3 69.2 25.2 7.0
    2015 RR245 63.9 33.7 129.2 22.1 3.9
    2014 SG350 63.0 39.9 63.9 24.8 6.8
    2014 FL72 62.1 38.2 170.4 25.0 6.8
    2013 AT183 62.1 36.0 88.1 22.0 4.7
    2014 FE72 61.8 36.3 4274.0 24.1 6.1
    2014 SV349 61.3 34.2 89.0 23.0 5.0
    2000 CR105 60.8 44.3 412 23.9 6.3
    2014 SU349 60.7 30.8 109.8 25.0 7.0
    2014 FF72 60.7 37.1 63.3 24.8 6.9
    2014 FM72 60.4 34.4 76.6 24.1 6.2
    2014 FH72 60.1 37.3 77.3 25.1 7.2
    2008 ST291 60.1 42.4 154.5 22.2 4.2
    2003 QX113 60.0 36.7 62.1 22.5 4.7
    2015 KH162 59.2 41.5 82.8 21.6 3.9
    Including all known objects currently located at least twice as far as Neptune.[6]
    See List of trans-Neptunian objects for more.

    See also

    References

    1. 1 2 3 Williams, G. V. (29 August 2016). "MPEC 2016-Q43 : 2014 FE72". Minor Planet Center. Retrieved 2016-08-31.
    2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "JPL Small-Body Database Browser: (2014 FE72)" (2015-12-09 last obs). Jet Propulsion Lab. Retrieved 1 September 2016.
    3. 1 2 3 Michael E. Brown. "How many dwarf planets are there in the outer solar system? (updates daily)". California Institute of Technology. Retrieved 2016-09-15.
    4. "Absolute magnitude (H)". Near Earth Object Program. NASA/Jet Propulsion Lab. Retrieved 2016-09-15.
    5. "Hunt for ninth planet reveals new extremely distant Solar System objects". CarnegieScience.edu. Carnegie Institution. 29 August 2016. Retrieved 2016-08-31.
    6. 1 2 "AstDyS-2, Asteroids - Dynamic Site". 2016-02-26. Retrieved 2016-02-29. Objects with distance from Sun over 59 AU
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