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Planetoid Is Found Beyond Neptune

From Associated Press

Astronomers said Thursday they have found a frozen object 4.4 billion miles from Earth that appears to be more than half the size of Pluto and larger than the planet’s moon.

If confirmed, the so-called planetoid would become the largest object found in our solar system since the ninth planet was first spied in 1930.

Preliminary observations suggest the frozen celestial body is 10% larger than Quaoar, an 800-mile-diameter object found in 2002.

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“Right now it looks like it could be bigger than Quaoar, which would put it bigger than anything since Pluto,” said Mike Brown, a Caltech astronomer.

Brown and colleagues Chad Trujillo of the Gemini Observatory in Hawaii and David Rabinowitz of Yale University discovered the object late Monday with a telescope at the Palomar Observatory outside San Diego.

The object, dubbed 2004 DW, lies at the outer fringes of the Kuiper Belt, a swarm of frozen rock and ice beyond the orbit of Neptune.

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Pluto is the largest known Kuiper Belt object, although it’s traditionally considered a planet. Its moon, Charon, is about 800 miles across.

The newfound frozen world is the 15th object larger than 300 miles in diameter found in the region.

Preliminary measurements suggest that the object follows an elliptical orbit that takes it within 2.7 billion miles of the sun and as far out as 4.7 billion miles away from it, Brown said.

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It takes the object an estimated 252 years to fully orbit the sun.

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