Science Blog ZINC PROJECTS

Possible planet around Sun-like star imaged


Date: 15-Sep-08
Author: Gemini Observatory

Astronomers have unveiled what is likely the first picture of a planet around a normal star similar to the Sun.

Three University of Toronto scientists used the Gemini North telescope on Mauna Kea in Hawai'i to take images of the young star 1RXS J160929.1-210524, which lies about 500 light-years from Earth, and a candidate companion of that star.

They also obtained spectra to confirm the nature of the companion, which has a mass about eight times that of Jupiter, and lies roughly 330 times the Earth-Sun distance away from its star. (For comparison, the most distant planet in our solar system, Neptune, orbits the Sun at only about 30 times the Earth-Sun distance.) The parent star is similar in mass to the Sun, but is much younger.


Infrared image of possibly a planet (circled) of a Sun-like star.  Courtesy: Gemini Observatory

The team's Gemini observations took advantage of adaptive optics technology to dramatically reduce distortions caused by turbulence in Earth's atmosphere. The near-infrared images and spectra of the suspected planetary object indicate that it is too cool to be a star or even a more massive brown dwarf, and that it is young. Taken together, such findings confirm that it is a very young, very low-mass object at roughly the same distance from Earth as the star.

Even though the likelihood of a chance alignment between such an object and a similarly young star is rather small, it will take up to two years to verify that the star and its likely planet are moving through space together.


Full story: First Picture of Likely Planet around Sun-like Star

 

ZINC Science Blog


Home  |  About  |  Projects  |  Science Blog  |  Learning Blog  |  Contact  |  Site Map

© 2010 ZINC PROJECTS. All Rights Reserved.

info@zincprojects.com