Trans-Neptunian object
From Wikinfo
A Trans-Neptunian object (TNO) is any object in the solar system with all or most of its orbit beyond that of Neptune. The Kuiper belt and Oort cloud are names for some subdivisions of that volume of space. Pluto is a trans-Neptunian object, and if it had been discovered today, it might not have been called a planet.
Gravity, the attracting force between all matter, also attracts planets. Due to the changes in the orbits of the known planets in the early 1900s, it was assumed that there was one or more planets beyond Neptune, but not yet identified. (See Planet X.) This search for these led to the discovery of Pluto, and since then a few other significant objects have been found. These are still too small to explain the perturbations, though, and revised estimates of Neptune's mass showed that the problem was fictitious.
Trans-Neptunian objects of note:
- 1992 QB1, a cubewano
- 1996 TL66, a scattered disk object
- 2004 DW
- Charon
- Ixion
- Pluto, a plutino
- Quaoar, a cubewano
- Varuna, a cubewano
- 2003 VB12 or Sedna, thought to be in the inner Oort cloud
The hypothetical companion star Nemesis would have fallen under the definition of trans-Neptunian object, but it appears that no such star actually exists.
External links
References
- Adapted from the Wikipedia article, "Trans-Neptunian_object" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trans-Neptunian_object, used under the GNU Free Documentation License

