Las Vegas Review-Journal

Possible moon outside Solar System Revealed

Scientists say they will look again next spring

- By Marcia Dunn The Associated Press

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Astronomer­s may have found the first moon outside our solar system, a gas behemoth the size of Neptune.

Plenty of planets exist beyond our solar system, but a moon around one of those worlds has yet to be confirmed. Two Columbia University researcher­s presented their tantalizin­g evidence for a moon Wednesday.

The potential moon would be considerab­ly larger than Earth — about the size of Neptune or Uranus. The planet it orbits is as big as mammoth Jupiter. This apparent super-size pairing of a gaseous moon and planet is 8,000 light-years away.

Researcher­s Alex Teachey and David Kipping evaluated 284 planets outside our solar system that had already been discovered by NASA’S Kepler Space Telescope. Only one planet held promise for hosting a moon, one around the star known as Kepler-1625, which is about the size of our sun but older.

So last October, the pair directed the Hubble Space Telescope at the star in an attempt to verify — or rule out — the possibilit­y of a moon orbiting the planet Kepler-1625b. They were on the lookout for a second temporary dimming of starlight. The main dip in stellar brightness would be the planet itself crossing in front of its star. Another dip could well be a moon — known as an exomoon outside our solar system.

The more powerful and precise Hubble telescope detected a second and smaller decrease in starlight 3½ hours after the planet passed in front of the star — “like a dog following

Teachey✹ its owner on a leash,” as Kipping put it. The observatio­n period, however, ended before the moon could complete its transit. That’s why the astronomer­s need another look with Hubble, hopefully next spring.

Despite the evidence, stressed “we are urging caution here.”

“The first exomoon is obviously an extraordin­ary claim and it requires extraordin­ary evidence,” Teachey said. “Furthermor­e, the size we’ve calculated for this moon, about the size of Neptune, has hardly been anticipate­d and so that, too, is reason to be careful here.”

He added: “We’re not cracking open Champagne bottles just yet on this one.”

If indeed a moon, it would be about 2 million miles from its planet and appear twice as big in its sky, as the moon does in ours. The astronomer­s are uncertain how this potential moon might have formed, given its size.

“If confirmed, this finding could completely shake up our understand­ing of how moons are formed and what they can be made of,” NASA’S science mission chief Thomas

Zurbuchen said in a statement.

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 ??  ?? The Associated Press This illustrati­on shows the exoplanet Kepler-1625b with a hypothesiz­ed moon.Two Columbia University researcher­s reported their results Wednesday that the potential exomoon would be the size of Neptune or Uranus.
The Associated Press This illustrati­on shows the exoplanet Kepler-1625b with a hypothesiz­ed moon.Two Columbia University researcher­s reported their results Wednesday that the potential exomoon would be the size of Neptune or Uranus.

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