Finally, rocky planet with atmosphere found 41 light years away
Astronomers have searched for years for rocky planets beyond our solar system with an atmosphere, a trait considered essential for any possibility of harbouring life. Well, they nally seem to have located one. But this hellish planet, apparently with a surface of molten rock, oers no hope for habitability.
Researchers said on Wednesday the planet is a "super-earth", a rocky world signicantly larger than our planet but smaller than Neptune, and it orbits perilously close to a star dimmer and slightly less massive than our sun, rapidly completing an orbit every 18 hours or so.
Infrared observations using two instruments aboard the James Webb Space Telescope indicated the presence of a substantial, if inhospitable, atmosphere, perhaps continuously replenished by gases released from a vast ocean of magma.
"The atmosphere is likely rich in carbon dioxide or carbon monoxide, but can also have other gases such as water vapor and sulphur dioxide. The current observations cannot pinpoint the exact
All of the previous exoplanets found to have atmospheres were gaseous planets, not rocky ones. As Webb pushes the frontiers of exoplanet exploration, the discovery of a rocky one with an atmosphere represents progress
atmospheric composition," said planetary scientist Renyu Hu of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory and Caltech, lead author of the study published in the journal Nature.
The Webb data also did not make clear the thickness of the atmosphere. Dr. Hu said it could be as thick as the earth's or even thicker than that of Venus, whose toxic atmosphere is the densest in our solar system.
The planet, called 55 Cancri e or Janssen, is about 8.8-times more massive than the earth, with a diameter about twice that of our planet. It orbits its star at one-25th the distance between our solar system's innermost planet Mercury and the sun. As a result, its surface temperature is about 1,725 degrees C.
The planet is probably tidally locked, meaning it perpetually has the same side facing its star, much like the moon does toward the earth. The planet is located in our Milky Way galaxy about 41 light-years from the earth, in the constellation Cancer. A light year is the distance light travels in a year, 9.5 trillion km. Four other planets, all gas giants, are known to orbit its host star.
That star is gravitationally bound to another star in a binary system. The other one is a red dwarf, the smallest kind of ordinary star. The distance between these companions is 1,000 times the distance between the earth and the sun, and light takes six days to get from one to the other.
All of the previous exoplanets found to have atmospheres were gaseous planets, not rocky ones. As Webb pushes the frontiers of exoplanet exploration, the discovery of a rocky one with an atmosphere represents progress.