Planet X revamped after the discovery of the Sedna-like object 2012 VP113?
Abstract
The recent discovery of the Sedna-like dwarf planet 2012 VP 113 by Trujillo and Sheppard has revamped the old-fashioned hypothesis that a still unseen trans-Plutonian object of planetary size, variously dubbed over the years as Planet X, Tyche, Thelisto, may lurk in the distant peripheries of the Solar System. This time, the presence of a super-Earth with mass m X = 2-15m at a distance d X≈ 200-300 astronomical units (AU) was proposed to explain the observed clustering of the arguments of perihelion ω near ω ≈ 0 but not ω≈ 180 for Sedna, 2012 VP 113 and other minor bodies of the Solar System with perihelion distances q>30 AU and semimajor axes a>150 AU. Actually, such a scenario is strongly disfavored by the latest constraints on the anomalous perihelion precessions of some Solar System's planets obtained with the INPOP and EPM ephemerides. Indeed, they yield d X 496-570 AU (m X=2m), and d X 970-1111 AU (m X = 15 m). Much tighter constraints could be obtained in the near future from the New Horizons mission to Pluto.
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