Young
Planet Orbits Sun-Like Star
By
Jeanna Bryner
Staff Writer
Astronomers
say they have discovered the youngest planet to date circling a sun-like star,
a find that will be a boon to the field of planet-formation theory.
The
extrasolar planet is an estimated 8 million to 10 million years old, a mere toddler
compared to Earth, which is 4.5 billion years old. Until now, the researchers
say, no planet younger than 100 million years old has been detected circling a
sun-like star.
"It
means we're opening up a new field of trying to find planets around very young
stars," said Alan Boss, a planet-formation theorist at the Carnegie Institution
of Washington. "So it's the very first example, and we hope there will be
a lot more." Boss was not involved in the discovery.
The
newly found world is so infantile that it resides in the star's "protoplanetary
disk," a ring of gas and dust circling the star. It has been catalogued as
TW Hya b.
"This
demonstrates that planets can form within 10 million years, before the disk has
been dissipated by stellar winds and radiation," the researchers write in
the Jan. 3 issue of the journal Nature.
Weighing
in at nearly 10 Jupiter masses, the planet circles at a distance of .04 Astronomical
Units (AU) from its host star, TW Hydrae, in the constellation Hydra. One AU is
the average distance between the Earth and sun.
The
gassy "hot Jupiter" takes 3.56 days to orbit its star. The host star
is located 180 light-years away from Earth.
Planets
are thought to form within disks of dust and gas around newly born stars. Catching
a planet in its childhood can give astronomers lots of information about how planets
materialize.
"The
discovery shows that what we always call as 'protoplanetary' disks are indeed
protoplanetary; they form planets," study researcher Johny Setiawan of the
Max-Planck Institute for Astronomy in Germany told SPACE.com. "There are
many 'protoplanetary' disks detected around young stars, but no planets so far
have been detected within such young systems."
Around
some young star systems, however, astronomers have found signs of planets by noting
clear lanes of dust within the disks. In these cases, it's presumed that young
planets are forming and have scooped up the dust, but the planets themselves have
not been detected.
Setiawan
and colleagues discovered their new world by measuring a wobble in the host star
due to the gravitational tug from the orbiting planet. This so-called radial-velocity
method is great at detecting extrasolar planets, but it also can produce false
positives suggesting a planet is there when in fact the data owe to some
other object or phenomenon.
That's
particularly true in young star systems. For one, nascent stars are incredibly
active and their changing outer atmospheres can at the very least make for background
noise. In addition, if the star rotates about its axis, that can be problematic.
"There
are lots of other things going on in these young stars that could give you a false
positive, where you think you're seeing a planet but you're actually seeing some
other stellar activity," Boss said in a telephone interview.
Boss
thinks the discoverers ruled out these non-planet signals. "They've done
a good job of trying to address those worries," he said.