Meet Niku, the Weird Object Beyond Neptune That Nobody Can Figure Out

Niku is 160,000 times fainter than Neptune, but it has been observed twenty-two times by astronomers, according to a paper published to arXiv detailing the discovery. Authored by the astronomer Ying-Tung Chen of Academia Sinca in Taiwan and an international team of astronomers from Harvard to Hawaii to Germany, the paper describes a sense of utter confusion regarding the behavior of this little object.
Niku orbits on a plane that is tilted 110 degrees from the plane of the rest of the solar system. One theory is that a large object’s gravity is influencing Niku, causing it to orbit at an angle to everything else as well as backward. Various theories, like a hidden Super Earth known as Planet Nine, an unseen dwarf star called Nemesis, or an unknown dwarf planet in the Kuiper Belt are all “problematic” when trying to explain the orbit of Niku, according analyses detailed in the arXiv paper. (It was another group of objects with a highly inclined orbit that first led astronomers to propose the possibility of Planet Nine.)
Ultimately, Chen and his fellow astronomers conclude that the “mechanism causing and maintaining this common plane is still unknown.
