......A
heavenly body possibly as large as the giant planet Jupiter and possibly
so close to Earth that it would be part of this solar system has been
found in the direction of the constellation Orion by an orbiting telescope
aboard the U.S. infrared astronomical satellite.
.....So mysterious is the object that astronomers
do not know if it is a planet, a giant comet, a nearby "protostar"
that never got hot enough to become a star, a distant galaxy so young
that it is still in the process of forming its first stars or a galaxy
so shrouded in dust that none of the light cast by its stars ever gets
through.
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......."All
I can tell you is that we don't know what it is," Dr. Gerry Neugebauer,
IRAS chief scientist for California's Jet Propulsion Laboratory and
director of the Palomar Observatory for the California Institute of
Technology, said in an interview.
.......The most fascinating explanation
of this mystery body, which is so cold it casts no light and has never
been seen by optical telescopes on Earth or in space, is that it is
a giant gaseous planet as large as Jupiter and as close to Earth as
50 billion miles. While that may seem like a great distance in earthbound
terms, it is a stone's throw in cosmological terms, so close in fact
that it would be the nearest heavenly body to Earth beyond the outermost
planet Pluto.
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.......
......."If
it is really that close, it would be a part of our solar system,"
said Dr. James Houck of Cornell University's Center for Radio Physics
and Space Research and a member of the IRAS science team. "If it
is that close, I don't know how the world's planetary scientists would
even begin to classify it."
......The mystery body was seen twice by
the infrared satellite as it scanned the northern sky from last January
to November, when the satellite ran out of the supercold helium that
allowed its telescope to see the coldest bodies in the heavens. The
second observation took place six months after the first and suggested
the mystery body had not moved from its spot in the sky near the western
edge of the constellation Orion in that time.
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