Dwarf Planets: Sedna
The most distant large object yet found orbiting the Sun and a candidate, but not an official, dwarf planet. It is currently 88 AU from the Sun, about three times farther than Neptune. Its classification remains uncertain – some researchers claim it is a detached Kuiper Belt object, while others suspect it might belong to the Oort Cloud. Sedna, named after the Inuit goddess of the ocean, is currently three times further away than Pluto, the average distance of which from the Sun is 5.9 billion km (3.6 billion miles). At its most distant, Sedna is almost 150 billion km (93 billion miles) from the Sun, or 990 times Earth's solar distance. It has an obital period, or year, of some 10,500 years. Its surface temperature is believed to be about -240°C (-400°F). Sedna, originally designated 2003 VB12, was first seen on Nov. 14, 2003 with the 48-inch Samuel Oschin Telescope at California's Mount Palomar Observatory. Astronomers from the California Institute of Technology, Yale University, and the Gemini Observatory were involved in the discovery. Observations show it measures less than 1,700 km (about 1,000 miles) in diameter, which is smaller than Pluto. Sedna has a high albedo and very red – the reddest large object in the Solar System after Mars. Its size suggests it should not be classified as a true planet, although there is disagreement among astronomers on this point and there are no hard and fast rules about what counts as a planet, planetoid, or minor planet. Sedna rotates more slowly on its axis than expected, suggesting it may have a satellite orbiting it.
(For further details see Sedna »)
