A Giant Planet Imaged in the Disk of the Young Star β Pictoris



Source:  Lagrange et al, Science AAAS


Excerpt: The 10-million-year-old star β Pictoris, has long been suspected to host a planet. Through images obtained with the Very Large Telescope, an array of four telescopes located in Chile, Lagrange et al. (p. 57, published online 10 June) now confirm the presence of a young, giant planet, β Pictoris b, orbiting within the dusty disk that surrounds the star. β Pictoris b orbits closer to its star than Uranus and Neptune do to the Sun in our solar system. This orbital separation is consistent with the in situ formation of the planet via a core accretion mechanism. Thus, giant planets can form within a stellar dust disk in only a few million years.

www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/329/5987/57

Popular posts from this blog

Supernova of a Generation: Brightest Exploding Star in 40 Years Spotted

How an Ocean-Sized Lake May Have Formed on Ancient Mars

Young double-star system discovered near our Galaxy’s giant black hole