Hindustan Times (Noida)

Jupiter-like alien planet observed still ‘in the womb’

- Reuters letters@hindustant­imes.com

Scientists have observed an enormous planet about nine times the mass of Jupiter at a remarkably early stage of formation – describing it as still in the womb – in a discovery that challenges the current understand­ing of planetary formation.

The researcher­s used the Subaru Telescope located in Hawaiian and the Hubble Space Telescope to detect and study the planet, a gas giant orbiting unusually far from its young star. Gas giants are planets, like our solar system’s largest ones Jupiter and Saturn, composed mostly of hydrogen and helium, with swirling gases surroundin­g a smaller solid core.

“We think it is still very early on in its ‘birthing’ process,” said astrophysi­cist Thayne Currie of the Subaru Telescope and the NASA-AMES Research Center, lead author of the study published in the journal Nature Astronomy. “Evidence suggests that this is the earliest stage of formation ever observed for a gas giant.”

It is embedded in an expansive disk of gas and dust, bearing the material that forms planets, that surrounds a star called AB Aurigae located 508 light years – the distance light travels in a year – from Earth. This star got a fleeting moment of fame when its image appeared in a scene in the 2021 movie “Don’t Look Up.”

About 5,000 planets beyond our solar system, or exoplanets, have been identified. This one, called AB Aur b, is among the largest. It is approachin­g the maximum size to be classified as a planet rather than a brown dwarf, a body intermedia­te between planet and star. Planets in the process of formation – called protoplane­ts – have been observed around only one other star.

Almost all known exoplanets have orbits around their stars within the distance that separates our sun and its most faraway planet Neptune. But this planet orbits three times as far as Neptune from the sun and 93 times Earth’s distance from the sun.

Its birth appears to be following a different process than the standard planetary formation model.

“The convention­al thinking is that most – if not all – planets form by slow accretion of solids onto a rocky core, and that gas giants go through this phase before the solid core is massive enough to start accreting gas,” said astronomer and study co-author Olivier Guyon of the Subaru Telescope and the University of Arizona.

In this scenario, protoplane­ts embedded in the disk surroundin­g a young star gradually grow out of dust- to boulder-sized solid objects and, if this core reaches several times Earth’s mass, then begin accumulati­ng gas from the disk. “This process cannot form giant planets at large orbital distance, so this discovery challenges our understand­ing of planet formation,” Guyon said.

Instead, the researcher­s believe AB Aur b is forming in a scenario in which the disk around the star cools and gravity causes it to fragment into one or more massive clumps that form into planets.

“There’s more than one way to cook an egg,” Currie said. “And apparently there may be more than one way to form a Jupiterlik­e planet.”

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