
The search for new heavenly bodies that may surround the Solar System has always been in progress. And one of the most sought after is Planet 9. This planet is said to be an ice giant which could have traversed and covered the Milky Way galaxy. To understand the milieu of the Solar System is a huge challenge. There is a compelling evidence that somewhere in the Kuiper Belt lies an object worthy of discovery. Both the natural science and physical science offer the knowledge about the architecture of the diverse heavenly bodies and spaces beyond.
At the beginning of 2016, “Evidence for a Distant Giant Planet in the Solar System” was published by Brown and Batygin. This paper detailed something about undiscovered planets like Nibiru or Planet X and a minor planet named Sedna which was discovered in year 2003. Back then, Sedna was known as the most distant coldest object in the Solar System. The paper revealed that there are vivid proofs that some objects were guided by Planet Neptune. However, a generous number of objects were found to orbit in an unusual odd orbital pattern that might possibly be aligned with a planet at a further distance.
Dr. Scott Sheppard of Carnegie Institute for Science headed a team of astronomers to find the hypothetical heavenly creature called Planet 9. Although, there are distant bodies found that directs to Planet 9, Dr. Sheppard and his team find no halt to gathering data and astronomical information to finally discover Planet 9.