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It's a Beautiful Baby Exoplanet! Historic Photo Is 1st View of Alien World Being Born
Space.com ^ | 07/02/18 | Mike Wall

Posted on 07/02/2018 12:31:54 PM PDT by Simon Green

A stunning, first-of-its-kind photo shows a huge, newfound alien world taking shape in the disk of gas and dust surrounding a young star.

The image is the first confirmed direct observation of such a young exoplanet, discovery team members said.

"These disks around young stars are the birthplaces of planets, but so far only a handful of observations have detected hints of baby planets in them," discovery leader Miriam Keppler, of the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy in Heidelberg, Germany, said in a statement. "The problem is that, until now, most of these planet candidates could just have been features in the disk." [Gallery: The Strangest Alien Planets]

Keppler and her colleagues analyzed new and archival observations of a young dwarf star called PDS 70, which is about 5.4 million years old and lies 370 light-years from Earth. These data were gathered by two instruments on the European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope (VLT) in Chile, and one instrument at Hawaii's Gemini Observatory.

The observations revealed the presence of a newborn gas giant in PDS 70's surrounding protoplanetary disk. And the team was able to photograph the alien world, known as PDS 70b, using one of the two VLT instruments, which is called SPHERE (Spectro-Polarimetric High-contrast Exoplanet Research).

SPHERE features a coronagraph, which blocks out the blinding light of a star, allowing dim orbiting planets to be resolved. (The Gemini instrument, the Near-Infrared Coronagraphic Imager, has one as well.)

The researchers' analyses suggest that PDS 70b is two to three times bigger than Jupiter and lies about 1.9 billion miles (3 billion kilometers) from its star — about as far as Uranus is from the sun.

PDS 70b is much hotter than any planet in our solar system, registering a sizzling 1,800 degrees Fahrenheit (1,000 degrees Celsius), the researchers determined. This elevated temperature may seem odd given the planet's significant distance from its star, but it's in line with that of other newborn gas giants, study team members said. (Extremely young planets retain a great deal of heat left from their formation.)

The researchers report the discovery of PDS 70b and its measured and inferred characteristics in a pair of new studies, both of which were published online today (July 2) in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics. (You can read them here and here.) (The research teams are not identical for both studies, but there is considerable overlap. For example, Keppler is lead author of the discovery paper and second author of the companion study.)

"Keppler's results give us a new window onto the complex and poorly understood early stages of planetary evolution," André Müller, lead author of the second study, said in the same statement.

"We needed to observe a planet in a young star's disk to really understand the processes behind planet formation," added Müller, who's also based at the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy.


TOPICS: Astronomy; Science
KEYWORDS: 2m1207b; astronomy; betapictoris; betapictorisc; coconuts2b; cvso30c; pds70b; science; xplanets
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To: ConservativeWarrior
Dinosaurs 🦖
21 posted on 07/02/2018 1:27:08 PM PDT by raybbr (That progressive bumper sticker on your car might just as wll say, "Yes, I'm THAT stupid!")
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To: Simon Green

Seems like they’re doing a bunch of supposing and stating it like it’s known fact.


22 posted on 07/02/2018 1:30:28 PM PDT by lurk
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To: lurk

Did you actually read the discovery paper and look at their data, or did you just spew your anti-science, anti-intellectual drivel without even bothering to look it up first?

https://www.eso.org/public/archives/releases/sciencepapers/eso1821/eso1821a.pdf


23 posted on 07/02/2018 1:45:00 PM PDT by messierhunter
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To: VaeVictis

Exactly a good guess.

They act like this stuff they say is based on known facts


24 posted on 07/02/2018 1:49:12 PM PDT by riverrunner
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To: VaeVictis

Ping for later.


25 posted on 07/02/2018 1:56:43 PM PDT by BushCountry (thinks he needs a gal whose name doesn't end in ".jpg")
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To: ConservativeWarrior

““If you could instantly travel 65 millions years from earth, and had a telescope powerful enough to see all the way back, what would you see?””

A rusted out Tesla playing Bowie.


26 posted on 07/02/2018 2:13:25 PM PDT by EQAndyBuzz (Proud member of the DWN party. (Deplorable Wing Nut))
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To: Simon Green

Call me in 50 million years for the Bar Mitzvah.


27 posted on 07/02/2018 4:00:04 PM PDT by I want the USA back (Search Google for: "politico obama collusion with hezbollah". obama is a traitor to this country.)
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To: Responsibility2nd

Is it bad that I know that’s from “Spaceballs”?


28 posted on 07/02/2018 4:17:46 PM PDT by ExGeeEye (For dark is the suede that mows like a harvest.)
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To: Simon Green

She looks photoshopped.


29 posted on 07/02/2018 4:49:33 PM PDT by Bellflower (Who dares believe Jesus. He says absolutely amazing things, which few dare consider.)
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To: raybbr

Winner, winner, chicken dinner!


30 posted on 07/03/2018 4:46:05 AM PDT by ConservativeWarrior (Fall down 7 times, stand up 8. - Japanese proverb)
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To: KevinDavis; annie laurie; Knitting A Conundrum; Viking2002; Ernest_at_the_Beach; Mmogamer; ...
This topic was posted 7/2/2018, thanks Simon Green.
· join · view topics · view or post blog · bookmark ·
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Google news searches: exoplanet · exosolar · extrasolar ·
X-Planets

31 posted on 02/01/2023 8:22:41 AM PST by SunkenCiv (Imagine an imaginary menagerie manager imagining managing an imaginary menagerie.)
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