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We consider the possibility of detecting and tracking the hypothesized Planet 9 or other unknown planetary-mass distant solar system members, generically called Planet X, with a combination of CMB and optical imaging surveys. Planets are detectable via thermal emission in CMB surveys and via reflected sunlight in optical surveys. Since the flux from reflected light falls off faster with distance, the signal-to-noise of planetary observations with optical surveys falls off faster than for CMB surveys. A promising approach to detecting new solar system planets with future surveys such as the Simons Observatory, CMB-S4 and LSST, is for a detection in CMB data followed by tracking in the synoptic imaging survey. Even if the parallax were not detected in CMB data, point sources consistent with thermal spectra could be followed up by LSST. In addition to expanding the Planet X discovery space, the joint datasets would improve constraints on key orbital and thermal properties of outer solar system bodies. This approach would work for a Neptune-like planet up to distances of a few thousand AU, and for an Earth-like planet up to several hundred AU. We discuss the prospects for the next decade as well as nearer-term surveys.
Cosmology experiments at mm-wavelengths can detect Planet Nine if it is the size of Neptune, has an effective temperature of 40 K, and is 700 AU from the Sun. It would appear as a ~30 mJy source at 1 mm with an annual parallax of ~5 arcmin. The chall
Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) is a powerful probe to study the early universe and various cosmological models. Weak gravitational lensing affects the CMB by changing its power spectrum, but meanwhile, it also carries information about the distrib
We report the results of a ${sim}4$-year direct imaging survey of 104 stars to resolve and characterize circumstellar debris disks in scattered light as part of the Gemini Planet Imager Exoplanet Survey. We targeted nearby (${lesssim}150$ pc), young
We present results of using individual galaxies probability distribution over redshift as a method of identifying potential catastrophic outliers in empirical photometric redshift estimation. In the course of developing this approach we develop a met
Planets form and obtain their compositions in dust and gas-rich disks around young stars, and the outcome of this process is intimately linked to the disk chemical properties. The distributions of molecules across disks regulate the elemental composi