, provisional designation , is a highly eccentric trans-Neptunian object, retrograde centaur and damocloid from the outer regions of the Solar System. It was discovered on 8 June 2013 by astronomers with the Mount Lemmon Survey at the Mount Lemmon Observatory in Arizona, United States. The object is approximately in diameter. It was numbered in 2016 and has not been named since.
orbits the Sun at a distance of 8.7âÂÂ353.1 AU once every 2434 years (888,879 days; semi-major axis of 180.92 AU). Its orbit has an exceptionally high eccentricity of 0.95 and an inclination of 125ð with respect to the ecliptic. The body's observation arc begins with its official discovery observation at Mount Lemmon in June 2013.
With a semi-major axis larger than that of Neptune, is generically classified as a trans-Neptunian object. It is also considered an (extended) centaur, due to its eccentric orbit with a low perihelion of 8.7 AU and a higher-than-90ð-inclination, which gives it a retrograde orbit. There are only about a hundred known retrograde minor planets out of nearly 800,000 observed bodies, and, together with and , it is among the largest such objects. also meets the orbital definition for being a damocloid, a cometary-like object without a coma or tail and a Tisserand's parameter with respect to Jupiter of less than 2 besides a retrograde orbit.
This distant minor planet was numbered by the Minor Planet Center on 20 June 2016 (). As of 2025, it has not been named.
According to Johnston's Archive and astronomer Michael Brown, measures 106 and 114 kilometers in diameter, based on an absolute magnitude of 8.1 and an assumed albedo for the body's surface of 0.08 and 0.09, respectively. As of 2018, no physical characteristics have been determined from photometric observations. The body's rotation period, pole and shape remain unknown.
On 12 April 2024, the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) observed using its Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI). Published results are expected at a later date.
On 30 January 2025, 's shadow, cast by a magnitude 12 star (TYC 2449-01891-1), swept across the eastern US and central Europe. Out of 31 stations, 7 successfully observed the occultation, from which a 122.2 km x 105.0 km profile was derived.