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Join to get access to perks: / @whatnextyoutube Subscribe for more: / @whatnextyoutube For nearly a decade, astronomers have searched for a mysterious, unseen world lurking far beyond Neptune, a hypothetical ninth planet hidden deep within the Kuiper Belt. The theory emerged in 2016 when two researchers, Mike Brown and Konstantin Batygin, noticed that several icy bodies were orbiting in unusual, clustered paths. The best explanation: a massive planet, perhaps five times the mass of Earth, influencing their motion from the shadows. This “Planet Nine” would be so distant it might orbit the Sun only once every 10,000 to 20,000 year, far beyond the reach of our most powerful telescopes. But in April 2025, a team of astronomers analyzing decades-old infrared satellite data spotted a barely visible dot, moving slowly in a pattern that matched what you’d expect from a distant, massive planet. However, excitement was quickly met with skepticism. Mike Brown reviewed the data and pointed out inconsistencies, the object’s orbit seemed tilted by 120 degrees, far off from Planet Nine’s predicted 15–20 degrees. It also moved in the opposite direction of known planets, raising doubts that this is the elusive ninth planet. Whether or not this new object is Planet Nine, its existence challenges our current models. If confirmed as a planet with the wrong orbit, it could even disprove the Planet Nine hypothesis entirely. With the upcoming Vera C. Rubin Observatory poised to scan the sky in unprecedented detail, answers may finally be within reach. What lies beyond Neptune may redefine everything we know about our solar system. Research: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2504.17288 https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10... Footage Credits: Caltech, Vera C. Rubin Observatory