Article 6VMV6 'Utterly Cataclysmic': James Webb Telescope Spots 2 Alien Planets Disintegrating Before Our Eyes

'Utterly Cataclysmic': James Webb Telescope Spots 2 Alien Planets Disintegrating Before Our Eyes

by
hubie
from SoylentNews on (#6VMV6)

upstart writes:

The James Webb Space Telescope is watching two distant alien planets "spilling their guts into space" as they rapidly disintegrate:

Astronomers have directly observed two worlds beyond our solar system shedding their outer layers into space for the first time. The new observations offer an unprecedented glimpse into the interiors of planets - a view that has long remained elusive, even for Earth.

The first "disintegrating" exoplanet is a Neptune-size rocky world called K2-22b, which zips around its star so closely that it completes an orbit in just nine hours. Scientists say the star's heat literally roasts the planet: K2-22b's surface reaches temperatures of more than 3,320 degrees Fahrenheit (1,826 degrees Celsius), which is hot enough not just to melt rock, but to vaporize it. Recent observations of K2-22b using the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) revealed that the evaporated rock has been sculpted into an extended, comet-like tail.

"It's a remarkable and fortuitous opportunity to understand terrestrial planet interiors," study co-author Jason Wright, a professor of astronomy and astrophysics at Penn State, said in a statement.

But this isn't the only evaporating planet spotted recently. Another disintegrating exoplanet circling a different star was discovered by a separate team using the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS). This roasted world, named BD+054868Ab, is the closest evaporating exoplanet to Earth discovered so far.

TESS data show that BD+054868Ab sports not one, but two massive tails: a leading tail of larger, sand-size particles; and a trailing tail with smaller, soot-size grains. Together, the tails span a whopping 5.6 million miles (9 million kilometers) and occupy roughly half the planet's orbit.

"These planets are literally spilling their guts into space for us," Nick Tusay, a graduate student in the Penn State Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics who led the JWST study, said in the statement. "With JWST, we finally have the means to study their composition and see what planets orbiting other stars are really made of."

Papers detailing the findings about both exoplanets have been uploaded as preprints and are still undergoing peer review.

[...] The findings come after TESS and JWST observed thousands of stars, searching for subtle-yet-periodic dips of light that occur when a planet crosses in front of its star. These dips, known as transits, reveal spectral fingerprints of the planets' chemical compositions, which allow astronomers to reverse engineer what the interiors of the crumbling planets may have once looked like.

Original Submission

Read more of this story at SoylentNews.

External Content
Source RSS or Atom Feed
Feed Location https://soylentnews.org/index.rss
Feed Title SoylentNews
Feed Link https://soylentnews.org/
Feed Copyright Copyright 2014, SoylentNews
Reply 0 comments