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Astronomers spot 'Ammonite', a distant world that questions planet nine

Japan's Subaru Telescope in Hawaii detected a faint, icy body. Now named 2023 KQ14, or Ammonite, it lies well beyond Pluto.

July 25, 2025 / 16:20 IST
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The orbit of the newly found dwarf planet ‘Ammonite’ (2023 KQ14, marked in red) is shown alongside the orbits of the other three known sednoids (in white). (Image: NAOJ)

Sky watchers might just have a new favourite. Astronomers have found a mysterious object drifting beyond Pluto. Named Ammonite, it could change how we understand our solar system’s edge.

Spotted After Years, Far Past Pluto

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In March 2023, Japan's Subaru Telescope in Hawaii detected a faint, icy body. Now named 2023 KQ14, or Ammonite, it lies well beyond Pluto. The object was uncovered as part of the FOSSIL survey, a project exploring the far reaches of space. Its nickname comes from the spiral fossil of an extinct sea creature. The team behind the find shared their results in Nature Astronomy on 14 July.

Ammonite joins a tiny group of celestial oddities. It's the fourth known sednoid, a type of distant object with an unusual orbit. Sednoids move far beyond Neptune, the outermost known planet. Sedna, the first sednoid found in 2004, gave the group its name. While Sedna ranges between 76 and 900 astronomical units (AU) from the Sun, Ammonite’s orbit stretches from 66 to 252 AU.