Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Star named after Indian scientist, exoplanet gets a Sanskrit name

- Snehal Fernandes snehal.fernandes@hindustant­imes.com ■

MUMBAI: A yellow-white dwarf star in the constellat­ion Sextans, located 340 light years away, was on Tuesday named Bibha, which means “a light beam” and refers to Bibha Chowdhuri, a pioneering Indian scientist who was the first woman researcher-faculty at the Tata Institute of Fundamenta­l Research in 1949.

Bibha’s exoplanet was christened Santamasa, a Sanskrit word that means “clouded”, which refers to the nature of the exoplanet’s atmosphere. US space agency Nasa defines exoplanets as planets that orbit around stars outside our solar system.

The names of the two astronomic­al bodies were announced by the Paris-based Internatio­nal Astronomic­al Union (IAU) along with the names of 111 sets of exoplanets and host stars.

Bibha and Santamasa symbolise what the physical and lighting conditions of the HD 86081 system could be, according to astrophysi­cists.

Chowdhuri, referred by the

EARLIER THIS YEAR, IAU, WHICH IS IN ITS 100TH YEAR, THREW OPEN IAU100 NAMEEXOWOR­LDS CAMPAIGNS AND ASSIGNED VARIOUS COUNTRIES WITH THE TASK OF NAMING A STAR AND ITS EXOPLANET

scientific community as an unsung Indian physicist, was one of the earliest particle and cosmic ray physicists in India. “Dr Bibha Chowdhuri discovered a new subatomic particle, the pi-meson, from experiment­s in Darjeeling, with her mentor DM Bose, and published her results in (journal) Nature, but did not get due recognitio­n. Somebody else got the Nobel prize for a later discovery,” said Somak Raychaudhu­ry, director, Inter-University Centre for Astronomy and Astrophysi­cs, Pune, who was also a member of the national committee that sent the final recommenda­tions to IAU.

Earlier this year, IAU, which is celebratin­g 100 years of its existence, threw open IAU100 NameExoWor­lds campaigns assigning various countries with the task of naming a star and its exoplanet.

India was allotted star HD 86081 and its exoplanet HD 86081b. Ananyo Bhattachar­ya, 20, student at Sardar Vallabhbha­i National Institute of Technology, Surat, proposed the winning name Bibha for star HD 86081. Exoplanet HD 86081b Santamasa was proposed by 13-yearold Vidyasagar Daud from Singhad

Spring Dale Public School.

The star HD 86081 is slightly hotter, larger and older than our Sun. About 20% bigger and more massive than our Sun, it is visible via binoculars and small telescopes.

Scientists said seeing exoplanet 86081b, which is composed entirely of gas, is, however, not as easy.

Discovered on April 17, 2006, the exoplanet is a giant planet and appears to be similar to the planet Jupiter in size and mass, but is unlike Jupiter, which is cold.

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