"Interpreting this system is extremely challenging. This is one of the reasons why we needed Hubble for this project – a clean image to better separate the light from the disk and any planet."
Thayne Currie, lead researcher on the study
NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has directly photographed evidence of a
Jupiter-like protoplanet forming through what researchers describe as an
"intense and violent process." This discovery supports a long-debated
theory for how planets like Jupiter form, called "disk instability."
The new world under construction is
embedded in a protoplanetary disk of dust and gas with distinct spiral
structure swirling around surrounding a young star that’s estimated to be
around 2 million years old. That's about the age of our solar system when
planet formation was underway. (The solar system's age is currently 4.6 billion
years.)
"Nature is clever; it can produce planets in a
range of different ways," said Thayne Currie of the Subaru Telescope and
Eureka Scientific, lead researcher on the study.
All planets are made from material that originated in
a circumstellar disk. The dominant theory for jovian planet formation is called
"core accretion," a bottom-up approach where planets embedded in the
disk grow from small objects – with sizes ranging from dust grains to boulders
– colliding and sticking together as they orbit a star. This core then
slowly accumulates gas from the disk. In contrast, the disk instability
approach is a top-down model where as a massive disk around a star cools, gravity
causes the disk to rapidly break up into one or more planet-mass fragments.
The newly forming planet, called AB Aurigae b, is
probably about nine times more massive than Jupiter and orbits its host star at
a whopping distance of 8.6 billion miles – over two times farther than Pluto is
from our Sun. At that distance it would take a very long time, if ever, for a
Jupiter-sized planet to form by core accretion. This leads researchers to
conclude that the disk instability has enabled this planet to form at such a
great distance. And, it is in a striking contrast to expectations of planet
formation by the widely accepted core accretion model.
The new analysis combines data from two Hubble
instruments: the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph and the Near Infrared
Camera and Multi-Object Spectrograph. These data were compared to those from a
state-of-the-art planet imaging instrument called SCExAO on Japan's 8.2-meter
Subaru Telescope located at the summit of Mauna Kea, Hawaii. The wealth of data
from space and ground-based telescopes proved critical, because distinguishing
between infant planets and complex disk features unrelated to planets is very
difficult.
Researchers were able to directly image newly forming exoplanet AB Aurigae b over a 13-year span using Hubble’s Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS) and its Near Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrograph (NICMOS). In the top right, Hubble’s NICMOS image captured in 2007 shows AB Aurigae b in a due south position compared to its host star, which is covered by the instrument’s coronagraph. The image captured in 2021 by STIS shows the protoplanet has moved in a counterclockwise motion over time. Credits: Science: NASA, ESA, Thayne Currie (Subaru Telescope, Eureka Scientific Inc.); Image Processing: Thayne Currie (Subaru Telescope, Eureka Scientific Inc.), Alyssa Pagan (STScI)
"Interpreting this system is
extremely challenging," Currie said. "This is one of the reasons why
we needed Hubble for this project – a clean image to better separate the light
from the disk and any planet."
Nature itself also provided a helping
hand: the vast disk of dust and gas swirling around the star AB Aurigae is
tilted nearly face-on to our view from Earth.
Currie emphasized that Hubble's longevity
played a particular role in helping researchers measure the protoplanet's
orbit. He was originally very skeptical that AB Aurigae b was a planet. The
archival data from Hubble, combined with imaging from Subaru, proved to be a
turning point in changing his mind.
"We could not detect this motion on
the order of a year or two years," Currie said. "Hubble provided a
time baseline, combined with Subaru data, of 13 years, which was sufficient to
be able to detect orbital motion."
"This result leverages ground and
space observations and we get to go back in time with Hubble archival
observations," Olivier Guyon of the University of Arizona, Tucson, and
Subaru Telescope, Hawaii added. "AB Aurigae b has now been looked at in
multiple wavelengths, and a consistent picture has emerged – one that's very
solid."
The team's results are published in the April 4 issue of Nature Astronomy.
"This new discovery is strong
evidence that some gas giant planets can form by the disk instability
mechanism," Alan Boss of the Carnegie Institution of Science in
Washington, D.C. emphasized. "In the end, gravity is all that counts, as
the leftovers of the star-formation process will end up being pulled together
by gravity to form planets, one way or the other."
Understanding the early days of the
formation of Jupiter-like planets provides astronomers with more context into
the history of our own solar system. This discovery paves the way for future
studies of the chemical make-up of protoplanetary disks like AB Aurigae,
including with NASA's James Webb Space Telescope.
The Hubble Space Telescope is a project of
international cooperation between NASA and ESA (European Space Agency). NASA's
Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, manages the telescope. The
Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) in Baltimore, Maryland, conducts
Hubble science operations. STScI is operated for NASA by the Association of
Universities for Research in Astronomy, in Washington, D.C.
Illustration
Credit: NASA, ESA, Joseph Olmsted (STScI)
Source: Hubble Finds a Planet Forming in an Unconventional Way | NASA
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