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19 November 2008
Scientists Discover New Planet Orbiting Dangerously Close to Giant Star
This release on science with the Hobby-Eberly Telescope at McDonald Observatory was provided by The Pennsylvania State University.
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. A team of astronomers from Penn State and Nicolaus Copernicus
University in Poland has discovered a new planet that is closely
orbiting a red-giant star, HD 102272, which is much more evolved than
our own Sun. The planet has a mass that is nearly six times that of
Jupiter, the largest planet in our solar system. The team includes Alexander Wolszczan, the discoverer of the first planets ever found
outside our solar system, who is an Evan Pugh Professor of Astronomy
and Astrophysics and the director of the Center for Exoplanets and
Habitable Worlds at Penn State; and Andrzej Niedzielski, who leads his
collaborators in Poland. The team suspects that a second planet may
be orbiting HD 102272, as well. The findings, which will be published
in a future issue of The Astrophysical Journal, shed light on the ways
in which aging stars can influence nearby planets.
Scientists already know that stars expand as they age and that they
eventually may gobble up adjacent planets. In fact, scientists expect
our own planet to be swallowed up by the Sun in about five billion years.
But what scientists don't yet understand fully is how aging stars
influence nearby planets before they are destroyed. The team's newly
discovered planet is interesting because it is located closer to a
red-giant star than any other known planet. From the distance of 0.6
astronomical units, which is just inside the orbit of Venus around the
Sun, the steadily expanding giant appears in the planets' alien skies
as a huge, reddish disk that is more than 16 times larger than the
face of Earth's full Moon appears to us.
"When red-giant stars expand, they tend to eat up the nearby planets,"
said Wolszczan. "Although the planet we discovered conceivably could
be closer to the star without being harmed by it, there appears to be
a zone of avoidance around such stars. Our discovery pushes it back
to about 0.6 astronomical units, which is the size of the new planet's
orbit. It is important to find out why planets don't want to get any
closer to stars, so one of our next steps is to try to figure out why
this zone of avoidance exists and whether it occurs around all
red-giant stars."
The team used the Hobby-Eberly Telescope at McDonald Observatory in
West Texas to make its discovery. Through the telescope,
which is equipped with a precise spectrograph, the scientists observed
a pattern of alternating shifts of spectral lines in the light coming
from the star, which is located 1,200 light-years from the Earth in
the constellation Leo. These tiny, alternating shifts represent the
fingerprint of a star that is moving alternately toward and away from
Earth as it wobbles in space responding to the gravitational pull of
an orbiting planet. Because of the Doppler effect, the light from the
star becomes bluer as it moves toward the Earth and then redder as it
recedes from it, which is reflected by the measured shifts of the
spectral lines. The specific pattern of these shifts, which the
research team observed, allowed the scientists to determine that one
planet — and possibly two planets — orbit the star. If the second
planet exists, the system would become the first multiplanet system
discovered around a red giant star.
Wolszczan said that he is particularly interested in applying to our
own solar system the knowledge he gains about the effects of aging
stars on planets orbiting other stars. "Our own Sun one day will
become a red giant and it is interesting to think about what will
happen to the outer planets of our solar system as the Sun expands,"
he said. "For example, Europa, one of Jupiter's moons, is covered by
ice, but if it were to exist closer to the Sun, it might become a warm
ocean world that could possibly support life."
In 1992, Wolszczan became the first person to discover planets outside
our solar system when he used the 1,000-foot Arecibo radio telescope to
detect three planets orbiting a rapidly spinning neutron star. The
discovery opened the door to the current intense era of planet hunting
by suggesting that planet formation could be quite common throughout
the universe and that planets can form around different types of
stellar objects. The Penn State Center for Exoplanets and Habitable
Worlds, which Wolszczan directs, fosters research in the field of
extrasolar-planet studies in which the primary goals are to find
planets where living organisms exist, or might exist, and to determine
their rate of occurrence in the universe. The researchers received
support from the Polish Ministry of Science and Higher Education, the
NASA Astrobiology Program, the Foundation for Polish Science, and the
Polish Academy of Sciences.
The Hobby-Eberly Telescope is a joint project of The University of Texas at Austin, The Pennsylvania State University, Stanford University, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, and Georg-August-Universität Göttingen.
END
Penn State Contacts:
Alexander Wolszczan: 814-863-1756
Barbara Kennedy (PIO): 814-863-4682
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