This artist's concept shows "The
Behemoth," an enormous comet-like cloud of hydrogen bleeding off of a
warm, Neptune-sized planet just 30 light-years from Earth. Also depicted
is the parent star, which is a faint red dwarf named GJ 436. The
hydrogen is evaporating from the planet due to extreme radiation from
the star. A phenomenon this large has never before been seen around any
exoplanet.
Credit: NASA, ESA, and G. Bacon (STScI)
Astronomers using NASA's Hubble Space
Telescope have discovered an immense cloud of hydrogen dubbed "The
Behemoth" bleeding off a planet orbiting a nearby star. The enormous,
comet-like feature is about 50 times the size of the parent star. The
hydrogen is evaporating from a warm, Neptune-sized planet, because of
the extreme radiation from the star.
A phenomenon this large has never before been seen around any
exoplanet. Given this planet's small size, it may offer clues to how hot
super-Earths -- massive, rocky, hot versions of Earth -- are born
around other stars through the evaporation of their outer layers of
hydrogen.
"This cloud is very spectacular, though the evaporation rate does not
threaten the planet right now," explains the study's leader, David
Ehrenreich of the Observatory of the University of Geneva in
Switzerland. "But we know that in the past, the star, which is a faint
red dwarf, was more active. This means that the planet evaporated faster
during its first billion years of existence. Overall, we estimate that
it may have lost up to 10 percent of its atmosphere."
The planet, named GJ 436b, is considered to be a "warm Neptune,"
because of its size and it is much closer to its star than Neptune is to
our sun. Although it is in no danger of having its atmosphere
completely evaporated and being stripped down to a rocky core, this
planet could explain the existence of so-called hot super-Earths that
are very close to their stars.
These hot, rocky worlds were discovered by the Convection Rotation
and Planetary Transits (CoRoT) spacecraft (led by the French Space
Agency (CNES) in collaboration with ESA (the European Space Agency), and
several other international partners), and NASA's Kepler space
telescope. Hot super-Earths could be the remnants of more massive
planets that completely lost their thick, gaseous atmospheres to the
same type of evaporation.
Because Earth's atmosphere blocks most ultraviolet light, astronomers
needed a space telescope with Hubble's ultraviolet capability and
exquisite precision to find "The Behemoth."
"You would have to have Hubble's eyes," says Ehrenreich. "You would
not see it in visible wavelengths. But when you turn the ultraviolet eye
of Hubble onto the system, it's really kind of a transformation,
because the planet turns into a monstrous thing."
Because the planet's orbit is tilted nearly edge-on to our view from
Earth, the planet can be seen passing in front of its star. Astronomers
also saw the star eclipsed by "The Behemoth" hydrogen cloud around the
planet.
Ehrenreich and his team think that such a huge cloud of gas can exist
around this planet because the cloud is not rapidly heated and swept
away by the radiation pressure from the relatively cool red dwarf star.
This allows the cloud to stick around for a longer time. The team's
findings will be published in the June 25 edition of the journal Nature.
Evaporation such as this may have happened in the earlier stages of
our own solar system, when Earth had a hydrogen-rich atmosphere that
dissipated over 100 million to 500 million years. If so, Earth may
previously have sported a comet-like tail. It's also possible it could
happen to Earth's atmosphere at the end of our planet's life, when the
sun swells up to become a red giant and boils off our remaining
atmosphere, before engulfing our planet completely.
GJ 436b resides very close to its star -- less than 3 million miles
-- and whips around it in just 2.6 Earth days. (In comparison, Earth is
93 million miles from our sun and orbits it every 365.24 days.) This
exoplanet is at least 6 billion years old, and may even be twice that
age. It has a mass of around 23 Earths. At just 30 light-years from
Earth, it's one of the closest known extrasolar planets.
Finding "The Behemoth" could be a game-changer for characterizing
atmospheres of the whole population of Neptune-sized planets and
super-Earths in ultraviolet observations. In the coming years,
Ehrenreich expects that astronomers will find thousands of this kind of
planet.
The ultraviolet technique used in this study also may spot the
signature of oceans evaporating on smaller, more Earth-like planets. It
will be extremely challenging for astronomers to directly see water
vapor on those worlds, because it's too low in the atmosphere and
shielded from telescopes. However, when water molecules are broken by
the stellar radiation into hydrogen and oxygen, the relatively light
hydrogen atoms can escape the planet. If scientists could spot this
hydrogen evaporating from a planet that is a bit more temperate and
little less massive than GJ 436b, that is a good sign of an ocean on the
surface.
Story Source:
The above post is reprinted from
materials provided by
Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI).
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