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A whole new world view

The JWST will open up new windows to explore exoplanets and their atmosphere­s

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All being well, the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) which launched on 25 December, has successful­ly reached its target at L2 (Lagrange point 2), on the far side of Earth to the Sun, where the gravity of the two large bodies and the centrifuga­l force balance each other. After a six-month testing process it will begin scientific observatio­ns, probably in June. The global astronomic­al community will get its first chance to use this new platform through the Cycle 1 General Observers (GO) program (see bit.ly/3J7v6AE for more details). This project gives astronomer­s a chance to use some of the 6,000 hours on offer for their research. Here are three of their proposals...

Charles A Beichman at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) and his team will use JWST’s coronagrap­h to attempt to image any small gas giant planets (down to half of Jupiter’s radius) around our closest Sun-like star, Alpha Centauri A, in their proposal Searching Our Closest Stellar Neighbor for

Planets and Zodiacal Emission. They’ll focus their search within three Astronomic­al Units of the star, where calculatio­ns predict a region of orbital stability, safe from the gravitatio­nal disruption of its binary twin Alpha Centauri B. They will also try to see out to the interplane­tary dust, which in our Solar System produces the zodiacal light. The team admits this is a high-risk attempt, but the chance of imaging a planet around our closest stellar neighbour is thrilling.

Meanwhile, in the proposal Tell Me How I’m Supposed To Breathe With No Air: Measuring the Prevalence and Diversity of M-Dwarf Planet

Atmosphere­s, Kevin Stevenson at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory and his team will observe nine small, terrestria­l planets orbiting the nearest M-class red dwarf stars. They will be looking for the infrared spectral signatures of carbon dioxide and methane gases, and therefore whether this category of worlds are able to cling on to an atmosphere. It’s a key question about the potential of habitabili­ty for life – M-class dwarfs are the most numerous kind of star in the Galaxy and their planets offer the only chance we’ll have in the next decade to measure their spectrum. This proposal illustrate­s the strength of a good name – taken from song lyrics by Jordin Sparks, the 2007 American Idol winner!

‘Super-puff’ puzzle

In the proposal Unveiling the Nature of

the Impossible Planets, Peter Gao at the University of California, Santa Cruz, and his team (including members from the University of Oxford) plan to study a mysterious kind of exoplanet known as a ‘super-puff’. This type of planet is relatively low-mass (less than Neptune), but seems to have a huge radius – its atmosphere apparently expanded out by the heat of its star. Such a planet ought to have suffered catastroph­ic atmospheri­c loss, which makes its existence a mystery. One proposed solution is that it only appears to be much larger than it actually is because it is enshrouded in a high-altitude haze layer. Gao has been awarded 12 hours of observing time to check this hypothesis, using JWST’s near-infrared spectromet­er to look for a chemical compositio­n that would indicate a haze in the ‘super-puff’ planet Kepler-51b. This is one of three super-puff planets orbiting the same star – all Jupiter-sized, but with masses only a few times that of Earth.

Such a planet ought to have suffered catastroph­ic atmospheri­c loss, which makes its existence something of a mystery

 ?? ?? One proposal would use the JWST to image gas giants around Alpha Centauri A
One proposal would use the JWST to image gas giants around Alpha Centauri A

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