The first three known sednoids, like all of the more extreme detached objects (objects with semi-major axes > 150 AU and perihelia > 30 AU; the orbit of
Neptune), have a similar orientation (
argument of perihelion) of ≈ 0° (). This is not due to an
observational bias and is unexpected, because interaction with the giant planets should have randomized their arguments of perihelion (ω), with precession periods between 40 Myr and 650 Myr and 1.5 Gyr for Sedna. This suggests that one or more undiscovered massive perturbers may exist in the outer Solar System. A
super-Earth at 250 AU would cause these objects to librate around ω = for billions of years. There are multiple possible configurations and a low-albedo super-Earth at that distance would have an
apparent magnitude below the current all-sky-survey detection limits. This hypothetical super-Earth has been dubbed
Planet Nine. Larger, more-distant perturbers would also be too faint to be detected. , 27 known objects have a semi-major axis greater than 150 AU, a perihelion beyond Neptune, an argument of perihelion of , and an
observation arc of more than 1 year. , , , , , , , , and are near the limit of perihelion of 50 AU, but are not considered sednoids. On 1 October 2018,
Leleākūhonua, then known as , was announced with perihelion of 65 AU and a semi-major axis of 1094 AU. With an aphelion over 2100 AU, it brings the object further out than
Sedna. In late 2015,
V774104 was announced at the Division for Planetary Science conference as a further candidate sednoid, but its
observation arc was too short to know whether its perihelion was even outside Neptune's influence. The talk about V774104 was probably meant to refer to Leleākūhonua () even though V774104 is the internal designation for non-sednoid . Sednoids might constitute a proper dynamical class, but they may have a heterogeneous origin; the spectral slope of is very different from that of Sedna. Malena Rice and Gregory Laughlin applied a targeted shift-stacking search algorithm to analyze data from
TESS sectors 18 and 19 looking for candidate outer Solar System objects. Their search recovered known objects like Sedna and produced 17 new outer Solar System body candidates located at geocentric distances in the range 80–200 AU, that need follow-up observations with ground-based telescope resources for confirmation. Early results from a survey with the
William Herschel Telescope aimed at recovering these distant TNO candidates have failed to confirm two of them. ==Theoretical population==