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Astronomers have taken what may the first picture of a planet orbiting a star similar to the sun.
This distant world is giant (about eight times the mass of Jupiter) and lies far out from its star (about 330 times the Earth-Sun distance). But for all the planet’s strangeness, its star is quite like our own sun.
Previously, the only photographed extrasolar planets have belonged to tiny, dim stars known as brown dwarfs. And while hundreds of exoplanets have been detected by noting their gravitational tug on their parent stars, it is rare to find one large enough to image directly.
“This is the first time we have directly seen a planetary mass object in a likely orbit around a star like our sun,” said David Lafreni�re, an astronomer at the University of Toronto who led the team that discovered the star. “If we confirm that this object is indeed gravitationally tied to the star, it will be a major step forward.”
Further study will be needed to prove that the planet is in fact orbiting around the star, as opposed to the possibility, however unlikely, that the two objects just happen to lie in the same area of the sky at roughly the same distance from us.
“Of course it would be premature to say that the object is definitely orbiting this star, but the evidence is extremely compelling,” Lafreni�re said. “This will be a very intensely studied object for the next few years!”
The researchers used the Gemini North telescope on Mauna Kea in Hawaii to glimpse the planet and its star, 1RXS J160929.1-210524, which lies about 500 light-years from Earth. Though the star has about 85 percent the mass of the sun, it is younger than our star. In order to image the far-flung system, the team utilized adaptive optics technology, which uses flexible mirrors to offset the distortion light suffers as it passes through Earth’s atmosphere.
Read more on yahoo.com
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