The Chronicle Herald (Metro)

Moon-forming region spotted in another solar system

- WILL DUNHAM

Scientists, for the first time, have spotted a moon-forming region around a planet beyond our solar system — a Jupiter-like world surrounded by a disk of gas and dust massive enough that it could spawn three moons the size of the one orbiting Earth.

The researcher­s used the ALMA observator­y in Chile's Atacama desert to detect the disk of swirling material accumulati­ng around one of two newborn planets seen orbiting a young star called PDS 70, located a relatively close 370 light years from Earth. A light year is the distance light travels in a year, about 9.5 trillion kilometres.

It is called a circumplan­etary disk, and it is from these that moons are born. The discovery, the researcher­s said, offers a deeper understand­ing about the formation of planets and moons.

More than 4,400 planets have been discovered outside our solar system, called exoplanets. No circumplan­etary disks had been found until now because all the known exoplanets resided in "mature" — fully developed — solar systems, except the two infant gas planets orbiting PDS 70.

"These observatio­ns are unique — so far — and have been long waited for, in order to test the theory of planet formation and directly observe the birth of planets and of their satellites," said astronomer Myriam Benisty of the University of Grenoble, who led the study published in the Astrophysi­cal Journal Letters.

In our solar system, the impressive rings of Saturn, a planet around which more than 80 moons orbit, represent a relic of a primordial moon-forming disk, said study co-author Stefano Facchini of the European Southern Observator­y.

The orange-coloured star PDS 70, roughly the same

mass as our sun, is about five million years old — a blink of the eye in cosmic time. The two planets are even younger.

Both planets are similar (although larger) to Jupiter, a gas giant that is our solar system's biggest planet. It was around one of the two planets, called PDS 70c, that a moonformin­g disk was observed. Researcher­s previously had found initial evidence of a disk around this planet, but now have confirmed it.

Both planets are "still in their youth," Facchini said, and are at a dynamic stage in which they are still acquiring their atmosphere­s. PDS 70c orbits its star at 33 times the distance of the Earth from the sun, similar to the planet Neptune in our solar system. Benisty said there are possible additional so-far undetected planets in the system.

Stars burst to life within clouds of interstell­ar gas and dust scattered throughout galaxies. Leftover material spinning around a new star then coalesces into planets, and circumplan­etary disks surroundin­g some planets similarly yield moons.

 ?? HANDOUT VIA REUTERS ?? Taken with the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillime­ter Array (ALMA), this undated image shows wide (left) and close-up (right) views of the moon-forming disc surroundin­g PDS 70c, a young Jupiter-like planet nearly 400 light-years away. The close-up view shows PDS 70c and its circumplan­etary disc center-front, with the larger circumstel­lar ring-like disc taking up most of the right-hand side of the image. The star PDS 70 is at the center of the wide-view image on the left.
HANDOUT VIA REUTERS Taken with the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillime­ter Array (ALMA), this undated image shows wide (left) and close-up (right) views of the moon-forming disc surroundin­g PDS 70c, a young Jupiter-like planet nearly 400 light-years away. The close-up view shows PDS 70c and its circumplan­etary disc center-front, with the larger circumstel­lar ring-like disc taking up most of the right-hand side of the image. The star PDS 70 is at the center of the wide-view image on the left.

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