A planet 6,000 light years from Earth reveals how the end of our solar system will look
A darkened planet circling the feeble remnant of a
burned-out star about 6,000 light-years from Earth shows what our own solar
system will look like at the end of its existence, astronomers say.
The distant survivor, described in a study published last
week in the journal Nature, seems to be a gas giant similar to Jupiter. It
provides a snapshot of a planetary system around a dying star, the study’s
authors said.
The star is a “white dwarf” a glimmering stellar remnant
left over from the “red giant” phase of its demise, when it expanded tens of
thousands of times after having used up the hydrogen fuel for its nuclear
fusion reactions and then collapsed a few hundred million years later.
Any planets closer to the star are likely to have been
destroyed and the same fate is likely to befall our own world when the sun
burns up all of its hydrogen in 5 billion years or so.
“When the sun balloons outwards in what’s known as its red
giant phase, it will likely obliterate Mercury and Venus and possibly Earth,”
said the lead author of the study, Joshua Blackman, an astronomer at the
University of Tasmania in Australia.
The sun will have grown too hot for anything on Earth to
survive well before then, and its red giant phase will cause lakes of lava,
broken continents and devastating blasts of intense ionizing radiation — if it
doesn’t fragment our planet entirely, he said in an email.
But it’s not all bad news: Mars and the outer gas giants —
Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune — are expected to survive the sun’s
burning-out. And now the detection of the distant planet orbiting a white dwarf
strengthens that idea.
“Our discovery is evidence that the standard picture of how
planetary systems evolve as their host star dies is likely to be correct,”
Blackman said.
The newly found white dwarf was detected toward the center
of our galaxy by a gravitational effect called “microlensing” as it passed in
front of a star even farther away.
The gravity of the white dwarf caused the distant star to
appear to grow brighter for a few years — a brief flash in astronomical time —
as its mass focused light through gravitational lensing, said Jean-Philippe
Beaulieu of the Institut d’Astrophysique de Paris, who led the research and is
a co-author of the study. A second flash of light revealed the orbiting planet.
In fact, it’s only because of microlensing that the white
dwarf system has been detected at all. Although the team tried to observe it
with the giant telescopes at the Keck Observatory in Hawaii, it proved too dim
to see.
They hope soon to get better results with the James Webb
Space Telescope, which is due to launch in December and will be able to observe
the darkened system directly, Beaulieu said.
Blackman said the gas giant, about 1.4 times the mass of
Jupiter, is orbiting 260 million miles to 600 million miles from the white
dwarf.
Although it’s likely to have formed farther from the star than its current orbit, the shrinking of the host star after its red giant phase hadn’t drawn it so close that it fragmented, which has been theorized in some models.
“We think the planet survived the red giant phase of its
star’s evolution likely untouched,” he said.
Lisa Kaltenegger, an associate astronomy professor and the
director of the Carl Sagan Institute at Cornell University, said the new
discovery is further proof that planets can survive the demise of their stars.
Kaltenegger, who wasn’t involved in the latest research, was
part of a team that reported the detection of a different giant planet orbiting
a white dwarf star late last year — the first one ever seen.
That study, however, showed that the planet completes an
entire orbit every 1.4 days — so it’s much closer to the white dwarf than
Mercury is to the sun.
Kaltenegger said it was likely to have formed much farther
away and spiraled inward as the star shrank until it stopped a few million
miles away.
Taken together, the discoveries show that outer planets —
and perhaps their moons — can survive the demise of their stars, although their
final orbits seem to depend on their circumstances, she said.
Although white dwarf remnants don’t produce a lot of light,
they do produce enough heat to warm their innermost planets, which implies that
life could still exist in such a planetary system when its star “dies” in this
way — perhaps beneath the icy crusts of the moons of gas giants, like Jupiter’s
Europa and Saturn’s Enceladus, she said.
Source: nbcnews
Except for the headline this story has not been edited by Blueplanet staff
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