ETV Bharat / international

RIT scientists discover nearest known 'Baby Giant Planet'

The baby giant planet called 2MASS 1155-7919 b is located in the Epsilon Chamaeleontis Association and lies only about 330 light-years from our solar system.

Representative Image
Representative Image
author img

By

Published : Feb 12, 2020, 2:28 PM IST

Washington: Scientists from Rochester Institute of Technology have discovered a newborn massive planet closer to Earth than any other of similarly young age found to date.

The baby giant planet called 2MASS 1155-7919 b is located in the Epsilon Chamaeleontis Association and lies only about 330 light-years from our solar system.

The discovery published in the Research Notes of the American Astronomical Society provides researchers with an exciting new way to study how gas giants form.

"The dim, cool object we found is very young and only 10 times the mass of Jupiter which means we are likely looking at an infant planet, perhaps still amid formation," said Annie Dickson-Vandervelde, lead author and astrophysical sciences and technology Ph.D. student from West Columbia, S.C.

Read Also: Never-seen images of Sun's turbulent surface released

"Though lots of other planets have been discovered through the Kepler mission and other missions like it, almost all of those are old planets. This is also only the fourth or fifth example of a giant planet so far from its parent star, and theorists are struggling to explain how they formed or ended up there."

The scientists used data from the Gaia space observatory to make the discovery. The giant baby planet orbits a star that is only about 5 million years old, about one thousand times younger than our Sun.

The planet orbits its sun at 600 times the distance of the Earth to the Sun. How this young, giant planet could have ended up so far away from its young parent star is a mystery. The authors hope that follow-up imaging and spectroscopy will help astronomers understand how massive planets can end up in such wide orbits.

Read Also: Record-breaking US astronaut returns to Earth

(Inputs From ANI)

Washington: Scientists from Rochester Institute of Technology have discovered a newborn massive planet closer to Earth than any other of similarly young age found to date.

The baby giant planet called 2MASS 1155-7919 b is located in the Epsilon Chamaeleontis Association and lies only about 330 light-years from our solar system.

The discovery published in the Research Notes of the American Astronomical Society provides researchers with an exciting new way to study how gas giants form.

"The dim, cool object we found is very young and only 10 times the mass of Jupiter which means we are likely looking at an infant planet, perhaps still amid formation," said Annie Dickson-Vandervelde, lead author and astrophysical sciences and technology Ph.D. student from West Columbia, S.C.

Read Also: Never-seen images of Sun's turbulent surface released

"Though lots of other planets have been discovered through the Kepler mission and other missions like it, almost all of those are old planets. This is also only the fourth or fifth example of a giant planet so far from its parent star, and theorists are struggling to explain how they formed or ended up there."

The scientists used data from the Gaia space observatory to make the discovery. The giant baby planet orbits a star that is only about 5 million years old, about one thousand times younger than our Sun.

The planet orbits its sun at 600 times the distance of the Earth to the Sun. How this young, giant planet could have ended up so far away from its young parent star is a mystery. The authors hope that follow-up imaging and spectroscopy will help astronomers understand how massive planets can end up in such wide orbits.

Read Also: Record-breaking US astronaut returns to Earth

(Inputs From ANI)

Intro:Body:Conclusion:
ETV Bharat Logo

Copyright © 2024 Ushodaya Enterprises Pvt. Ltd., All Rights Reserved.