Every few years, the hunt for the elusive "Planet Nine" (or Planet X) reignites. You’ve probably seen the grainy thumbnails and bold claims: “NASA just photographed Planet X!” But is there really a hidden giant lurking at the edge of our solar system? Let’s look at the actual pictures—and what they show.
Are there real pictures? Not yet. But there are real detections in other wavelengths (infrared and submillimeter) waiting to be confirmed. The first telescope to catch it will likely be the Rubin Observatory (coming online in 2025) or JWST if it gets lucky. pictures of planet x
Want to follow the real hunt? Bookmark the “Planet Nine” page on Caltech’s site or check the daily image releases from Subaru Telescope. And when that first pixelated photo drops—you’ll know it’s not an artist’s fantasy. Every few years, the hunt for the elusive
Here’s the honest truth: However, we have indirect pictures —maps of clustered Kuiper Belt object orbits that point to something big. That’s like seeing a ripple in water and knowing something swam by, even if you didn’t see the fish. Are there real pictures
Have you seen a “Planet X photo” that seemed too good to be true? Share it in the comments, and I’ll help fact-check it.
Pictures of Planet X: What Have We Really Seen?