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Dhaka Tribune

Harvard scientists launch plan to find 'black hole' at edge of solar system

The discovery of those flares would allow scientists to know for sure whether "Planet Nine" is actually a black hole

Update : 10 Jul 2020, 06:37 PM

Harvard scientists have proposed a plan to find out the nature of a hypothesized object at the edge of Earth’s solar system, the Independent reported.

The proposal would allow for scientists to find whether is a black hole at the distant reaches of the planet’s neighbourhood – and whether that is what actually makes up the mysterious "planet nine" that some believe to be lying undiscovered out there.

Numerous researchers have suggested that there could be another planet lurking at the edges of our solar system. But it has never been observed directly – instead, it has been suggested that other objects around it appear to move so strangely that there must be some undiscovered object out there disturbing them.

Others have suggested that same behaviour could actually be caused by a primordial black hole, which would also have effects on the objects around it but would be very difficult to observe at such a distance. Any possible black hole would also be tiny: as big as a grapefruit, with a mass of about five earths.

Now they have suggested that it would be possible to test that theory by looking for "accretion flares."

The discovery of those flares would allow scientists to know for sure whether "Planet Nine" is actually a black hole.

 “In the vicinity of a black hole, small bodies that approach it will melt as a result of heating from the background accretion of gas from the interstellar medium onto the black hole,” Amir Siraj, an undergraduate student at Harvard who worked to propose the idea, told the Independent. 

“Once they melt, the small bodies are subject to tidal disruption by the black hole, followed by accretion from the tidally disrupted body onto the black hole.”

That would be the only way to see any black hole – because their nature means they cannot be otherwise seen.

“Because black holes are intrinsically dark, the radiation that matter emits on its way to the mouth of the black hole is our only way to illuminate this dark environment," said Avi Loeb, Frank B Baird Jr Professor of Science at Harvard, who has also proposed the plan.

Scientists hope they would be able to spot those flares by using the Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST) mission, which is expected to start surveying the sky later this year. Without that technology, we do not have instruments sensitive enough to be able to see those accretion flares.

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