2010. május 29., szombat

Hubble observes star eating a planet

Hubble observes star eating a planet

ANI / Phaenomenica
May 22, 2010


http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/47892000/jpg/_47892561_planet-eatingstar.jpg

An artists concept of the exoplanet WASP 12b, a gas giant bigger than Jupiter, which is being destroyed by its parent star (NASA/ESA/G.Bacon)


A new instrument on NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope, called the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph (COS), has observed that the hottest known planet in the Milky Way galaxy being eaten by its parent star.

The planet may only have another 10 million years left before it is completely devoured.

The planet, called WASP-12b, is so close to its Sun-like star that it is superheated to nearly 2,800 degrees Fahrenheit and stretched into a football shape by enormous tidal forces.

The atmosphere has ballooned to nearly three times Jupiter’s radius and is spilling material onto the star.

The planet is 40 percent more massive than Jupiter.

This effect of matter exchange between two stellar objects is commonly seen in close binary star systems, and this is the first time it has been seen so clearly for a planet.

“We see a huge cloud of material around the planet which is escaping and will be captured by the star. We have identified chemical elements never before seen on planets outside our own solar system,” said team leader Carole Haswell of The Open University in Great Britain.

A study last year predicted that the planet’s surface would be distorted by the star’s gravity, and that gravitational tidal forces make the interior so hot that it greatly expands the planet’s outer atmosphere.

Now Hubble has confirmed this prediction.

WASP-12 is a yellow dwarf star located approximately 600 light-years away in the winter constellation Auriga.

The exoplanet was discovered by the United Kingdom’s Wide Area Search for Planets (WASP) in 2008.

The automated survey looks for the periodic dimming of stars from planets passing in front of them, an effect called transiting.

The hot planet is so close to the star it completes an orbit in 1.1 days.

The unprecedented ultraviolet (UV) sensitivity of COS enabled measurements of the dimming of the parent star’s light as the planet passed in front of the star.

The UV spectral observations showed that absorption lines from aluminum, tin, manganese, among other elements became more pronounced as the planet transited the star, meaning that these elements exist in the planet’s atmosphere as well as the star’s.

The fact the COS could detect these features on a planet offers strong evidence that the planet’s atmosphere is greatly extended because it is so hot.

The UV spectroscopy was also used to calculate a light curve to precisely show just how much of the star’s light is blocked out during transit.

The depth of the light curve allowed the COS team to accurately calculate the planet’s radius.

They found that the UV-absorbing exosphere is much more extended than that of a normal planet that is 1.4 times Jupiter’s mass.

It is so extended that the planet’s radius exceeds its Roche lobe, the gravitational boundary beyond which material would be lost forever from the planet’s atmosphere.

The results were published in the latest issue of The Astrophysical Journal Letters.

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