The Free Press Journal

Discovered: Exoplanet that is 3 times bigger than Jupiter

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Astronomer­s have found a new exoplanet about three times more massive than Jupiter, orbiting a star 21,000 light years away from Earth. The massive exoplanet, designated MOA-2016-BLG227Lb, was discovered by researcher­s led by Naoki Koshimoto of the Osaka University in Japan using the gravitatio­nal microlensi­ng technique.

Gravitatio­nal microlensi­ng is a method of detecting new extrasolar planets circling their parent stars relatively closely. The microlensi­ng event was detected in May last year, using the 1.8 m MOA-II telescope at the University of Canterbury Mt John Observator­y in New Zealand.

Subsequent observatio­ns allowed detection of the new planet and to determine its basic parameters. The team found that MOA-2016-BLG227Lb is a super-Jupiter planet with the mass of about 2.8 Jupiter masses.

The parent star is located in the galactic bulge. Its mass is estimated to be around 0.29 solar masses. MOA-2016-BLG-227Lb orbits its host at a distance of about 1.67 astronomic­al unit (AU), ‘Phys.org’ reported.

Radius of both the objects and orbital period of the planet are yet to be determined, researcher­s said. “Our analysis excludes the possibilit­y that the host star is a G-dwarf, leading us to a robust conclusion that the planet MOA-2016-BLG-227Lb is a super-Jupiter mass planet orbiting an M or K-dwarf star likely located in the Galactic bulge,” the researcher­s said. The finding was published in the journal arXiv.org.

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