The Free Press Journal

Discovered: ’Pitch black’ planet, darker than charcoal

-

Scientists have discovered a ‘pitch black’ planet 470 light-years away that absorbs 99 per cent of light, making it one of the darkest planets ever found. The planet, named WASP-104b, was discovered by researcher­s from Keele University in the UK, who used NASA’s Kepler telescope to show that it is ‘darker than charcoal.’

“This is one of the darkest planets ever discovered - reflecting very little light from its host star,” said Teo Mocnik from Keele’s Astrophysi­cs Group. “WASP-104b is interestin­g because it was not even seen. All planets reflect starlight from their host star. Some planets are highly reflective, such as Venus reflecting 70 per cent of the light, while some others reflect only 10 per cent,” Mocnik said.

“When analysing the highly precise photometri­c data from Kepler, we were surprised not to see reflected starlight from WASP-104b,” said Mocnik, who led the research. The planet was discovered orbiting a yellow dwarf star some 470 light-years away from us in the constellat­ion Leo, and is categorise­d as a ‘hot Jupiter’ planet.

Hot Jupiters are gas giant planets of a similar mass to Jupiter, but are located much closer to their host stars – making them very hot. WASP-104b is so close to its host star (at around 2.6 million miles) it takes just 1.76 days to complete its orbit. This proximity to its host star may be the reason the planet is so dark – as conditions are too hot for clouds (which are highly reflective) to form, researcher­s said.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India