2014 UZ224

2014 UZ224
2014 UZ224 imaged by ALMA
Discovery
Discovered byDavid Gerdes et al.
Discovery siteCerro Tololo Obs.
Discovery date21 October 2014
Designations
2014 UZ224
DeeDee (nickname)
TNO · SDO
Orbital characteristics
Epoch 05 May 2025 (JD 2460800.5)
Uncertainty parameter 4
Observation arc15.98 yr (5,836 days)
Earliest precovery date15 October 2006
Aphelion181.17±0.23 AU
Perihelion38.695±0.011 AU
109.93±0.14 AU
Eccentricity0.648
1152.6±2.2 yr (421000±820 days)
323.47±0.09°
0° 0m 3.096s / day
Inclination26.7787°
131.133±0.003°
23 April 2142 ±26 days
28.55±0.03°
Known satellites0
Physical characteristics
635+57
−62
 km
0.131+0.038
−0.028
gr = 0.77±0.11
ri = 0.39±0.07
i-z = 0.22±0.16
23.38±0.05

2014 UZ224 is a large trans-Neptunian object orbiting in the scattered disc of the outermost regions of the Solar System, estimated to be around 550 to 700 km (350 to 450 miles) in diameter. As of 2021, it is approximately 89.7 AU (13.42 billion km) from the Sun, and will slowly decrease in distance until it reaches its perihelion of 38 AU in 2142. The discoverers have nicknamed it "DeeDee" for "Distant Dwarf".

2014 UZ224 was discovered by a team led by David Gerdes using data collected by the large camera Dark Energy Camera (DECam). The discovery was announced by the Minor Planet Center on 11 October 2016. Assuming its nominal diameter of 635 km (395 mi), it reflects just 13 percent of the sunlight that hits it. The earliest known precovery observations of 2014 UZ224 were taken at the Mauna Kea Observatory on 15 October 2006.

2014 UZ224 has not yet been imaged by high-resolution telescopes, so it has no known moons. The Hubble Space Telescope is planned to image 2014 UZ224 in 2026, which should determine if it has any significantly sized moons.