Stabroek News Sunday

With a gulp and burp, a bloated star swallows a Jupiter-sized planet

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) - In a glimpse of the dismal fate awaiting Earth, scientists for the first time have observed a star, bloated in its old age, swallowing a Jupiter-like planet, then expelling some material into space in an energetic belch.

Researcher­s said on Wednesday the star was in the early stages of what is called the red giant phase late in its lifespan as it depleted hydrogen fuel in its core and its dimensions began to expand. As the star grew, its surface reached the orbit of the doomed planet, with mayhem ensuing.

The star, which started out similar to our sun in size and compositio­n, is located in our Milky Way galaxy about 12,000 light-years from Earth in the direction of the constellat­ion Aquila. A light year is the distance light travels in a year, 5.9 trillion miles (9.5 trillion km).

The star is around 10 billion years old, twice as old as the sun.

Red giant stars can swell to a hundred times their original diameter, engulfing any planets in their way. Scientists previously have observed such star expansion but not a planetary engulfment.

Mercury, Venus and finally Earth, our solar system’s three innermost planets, will meet this destiny as the sun evolves through its red giant phase in about 5 billion years, according to Kishalay De, a postdoctor­al fellow at the MIT Kavli Institute for Astrophysi­cs and Space Research and lead author of the study published in the journal Nature.

The planet in this research was a type called a “hot Jupiter” - a gas giant resembling our solar system’s biggest world but with an orbit much tighter to its star. This planet, perhaps a few times bigger than Jupiter, orbited its star in less than a day at a distance closer than Mercury, our innermost planet, orbits the sun.

As the star grew, its surface drew closer to the planet’s orbit.

“The planet started to skim through the star’s atmosphere just like a satellite falling into Earth’s atmosphere. The deeper the planet fell into the star’s atmosphere, the denser its surroundin­gs, and the faster it was dragged inward,” said study coauthor Morgan MacLeod, a postdoctor­al fellow at the HarvardSmi­thsonian Center for Astrophysi­cs.

“This took a planetary orbit that may have existed stably for millions or billions of years, and caused it to plunge suddenly into the star, powering the emission that we see. Essentiall­y, the star swallowed its planet so suddenly that we got to see its energetic burp,” MacLeod said, referring

to some material expelled into space in a luminous flare. “Intense heat eventually rips the planet apart, and its material is mixed throughout the star.”

The researcher­s have not spotted other planets orbiting this star but are not ruling it out.

“This planet doesn’t go out

without a fight. Even before it is engulfed whole, our data provides evidence that the planet tries to rip out the star’s surface layers with its own gravity. But the star happens to be a thousand times more massive so the planet can’t do much and eventually makes the plunge,” De said.

 ?? Caltech/IPAC/Handout via REUTERS ?? This undated artist’s impression shows a doomed planet skimming the surface of its star, located about 15,000 light-years away from Earth, before being fully engulfed. K. Miller/R. Hurt
Caltech/IPAC/Handout via REUTERS This undated artist’s impression shows a doomed planet skimming the surface of its star, located about 15,000 light-years away from Earth, before being fully engulfed. K. Miller/R. Hurt

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