Exeter:The planet Beta Pictoris b, orbiting its young star, Beta Pictoris.
It's 63 million light-years away from Earth, but new measurements about its orbit could shed new light on how planetary systems form and evolve.
Scientists already knew some details about the distant mass.
"It's eleven times more massive than Jupiter. So, it's certainly a gas giant. And it orbits roughly at a separation of Saturn in our solar system, its star. And the whole system is very young, about 20 million years," explains Stefan Kraus, associate professor in astrophysics at the University of Exeter.
Kraus led a team of international scientists to measure the planet's spin-orbit alignment using the Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI) in Chile.
Scientists say it's the first time this has been done for a directly imaged planetary system.
The spin-orbit alignment is the degree of alignment between the orbit of planets and their star's rotation axis.
In our solar system, for example, the planets orbit on a plane in line with the equator of the sun and the same direction as the Sun rotates.
Measuring Beta Pictoris b considered to be a 'wide separation planet', that is one that is positioned far from its star helps scientists understand how planetary systems are formed, particularly with regards to so-called 'Hot Jupiters' planets found very close to their star.