Never-before-seen alien planet just 300 light-years from Earth

Blackie

Banned
Joined
Mar 24, 2010
Messages
12,805
Reaction score
37,719
planet-alpha-centauri-b.jpg

.. artist rendering ..

A newly discovered gaseous planet has been directly photographed orbiting a star about 300 light-years from Earth -- equivalent to 3.7 billion round trip flights to the moon.

Imaging alien planets is difficult, and this world may be the least massive planet directly observed outside of the solar system, scientists say.

A sharp new photo released by the European Southern Observatory (ESO) Monday, June 3, depicts the suspected gas giant (called HD 95086 b) circling its young star (named HD 95086) in infrared light. The star has been removed from the image to allow the planet — shown as a bright blue dot at the bottom left of the picture — to shine through.

Top 10 Discoveries of the European Southern Observatory | Space.com

HD 95086 b was sighted by ESO's Very Large Telescope in Chile. Based on the planet's brightness, scientists estimate that it is only about four or five times more massive than Jupiter. [See Amazing Photos of the Very Large Telescope]

chile-full-moon-100609-02.jpg


Most exoplanets are discovered via indirect means, such as detecting a dip in a star's light when a planet passes in front of it, blocking part of its face, or finding a slight wobble in a star's movement caused by the gravitational tug of planets orbiting it.

"Direct imaging of planets is an extremely challenging technique that requires the most advanced instruments, whether ground-based or in space," Julien Rameau, an astronomer at the Institute of Astrophysics and Planetology in France and lead author of the study announcing the discovery, said in a statement. "Only a few planets have been directly observed so far, making every single discovery an important milestone on the road to understanding giant planets and how they form."

Another photo from ESO shows the star and its planet in context with other stars in the southern constellation of Carina, the keel.

The planet orbits its star at about twice the distance from the sun to Neptune and about 56 times the distance between Earth and the sun. The blue circle in the photo represents the distance between the sun and Neptune.

HD 95086 is relatively young star at only 10 million to 17 million years old, making the formation of the exoplanet and the dusty disc surrounding the star potentially intriguing to researchers.

"[The planet's] current location raises questions about its formation process," Anne-Marie Lagrange, one of Rameau's team members, said in a statement. "It either grew by assembling the rocks that form the solid core and then slowly accumulated gas from the environment to form the heavy atmosphere, or started forming from a gaseous clump that arose from gravitational instabilities in the disc. Interactions between the planet and the disc itself or with other planets may have also moved the planet from where it was born."

Read more: Never-before-seen alien planet just 300 light-years from Earth | Fox News
__________________________________________________________
 

lespaul01

Banned
Joined
Mar 12, 2011
Messages
16,929
Reaction score
16,600
300 light years.. Nice, see ya in hell Slacks

LP
 

circles

Senior Member
Joined
Jun 11, 2011
Messages
8,155
Reaction score
10,655
Too many words! Hurt brain! Artist rendering! Hurt brain! :run:

Interesting info, stories like this and related seem to be coming with greater frequency now that they current generation of satellites and what not come on line. Space is cool.
 

Phil47uk

Senior Member
Joined
May 30, 2008
Messages
53,038
Reaction score
210,894
Good post Blackie..:dude:

Yeah the problem with all these planet finds is that they are still seeking a rocky planet with about the same mass as earth that inhabits the Goldielocks Zone'.
A distance from the star just far enough away that too close water will evaporate and too far it will freeze.
Life needs liquid water to get a hold and advance and it's finding a planet like this that's proving difficult.
In all probability there must be some like that out there, it's just a matter of finding them.
But life getting a foothold on earth had extremely rare odds against it.
Jupiter acts as our local vacuum cleaner sucking in lots of debris that would have otherwise bombarded earth and wiped out most of the chances of life gaining a foothold. Also, our moon and our elliptical orbit around the sun is just the right size and distance away as to create seasons and tides. All necessary for the evolution of advanced carbon based life forms.
The chances of finding another blue planet like ours are trillions to one odds, but I'm sure that out there somewhere there is something similar.. At least I hope there is..:dude:
 

Latest Threads



Top