Deccan Chronicle

Giant planet found orbiting dead star

A year on Jupiter-sized planet quickly whipping around is only 1.4 days

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Washington, Sept. 17: Scientists have, for the first time, discovered a Jupiter-sized planet orbiting a white dwarf or a dead star located about 80 light years away.

The finding, published in the journal Nature, shows the likely presence of the planet, named WD 1856 b, orbiting the smaller star remnant every 34 hours. “This planet is roughly the size of Jupiter, but it also has a very short orbital period — a year on this planet is only 1.4 days, so it’s quickly whipping around its white dwarf star,” said Ian Crossfield, assistant professor at the University of Kansas in the US.

A white dwarf is the vestige of a star that has ballooned into a red giant then collapsed back into a dense, dim core that is often about the size of Earth, so this planet is much larger than what is left of its star, the researcher­s said. The process usually devours orbiting planets — but not in the case of WD 1856 b, which appears somehow to have avoided destructio­n, they said. “This tells us white dwarfs can have planets, which is something we didn’t know before,” Crossfield said. “There are people who now are looking for transiting planets around white dwarfs that could be potentiall­y habitable.

It’d be a pretty weird system, and you'd have to think about how the planets actually survived all that time,” he said. The researcher­s noted that this finding proves that some kinds of planets can survive and be found around white dwarfs. At first, WD 1856 b captured astronomer­s’ interest when they noticed a possible transiting object with NASA’s TESS Space Telescope survey. —

 ?? NASA ?? Picture of the first time, discovered a Jupiter-sized planet orbiting a white dwarf. —
NASA Picture of the first time, discovered a Jupiter-sized planet orbiting a white dwarf. —

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