Only a point of light is visible on the
JWST/MIRI images. Nevertheless, the initial analysis suggests the presence of a
gaseous planet that may have properties similar to Jupiter. Credit: T. Müller
(MPIA/HdA)
Using
the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), an MPIA-led team of astronomers imaged a
new exoplanet that orbits a star in the nearby triple system Epsilon Indi. The
planet is a cold super-Jupiter exhibiting a temperature of around 0 degrees
Celsius and a wide orbit comparable to that of Neptune around the sun.
This measurement was only possible
thanks to JWST's unprecedented imaging capabilities in the thermal infrared. It
exemplifies the potential of finding many more such planets similar to Jupiter
in mass, temperature, and orbit. Studying them will improve our knowledge of
how gas giants form and evolve in time.
"We were excited when we realized
we had imaged this new planet," said Elisabeth Matthews, a researcher at
the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy in Heidelberg, Germany. She is the main
author of the underlying research article published in the journal Nature.
"To our surprise, the bright spot that appeared in our MIRI images did not match the position we were expecting for the planet," Matthews points out. "Previous studies had correctly identified a planet in this system but underestimated this super-Jupiter gas giant's mass and orbital separation." With the help of JWST, the team was able to set the record straight.
The gas-giant exoplanet Epsilon Indi Ab
imaged using the MIRI instrument on NASA’s Webb telescope. A star symbol marks
the location of the host star, whose light has been blocked by MIRI’s
coronagraph, resulting in the dark circle with a dashed white line. The planet
is to the left of the star. Credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, E. Matthews (Max
Planck Institute for Astronomy)
This detection is quite unusual in
several respects. It shows the first exoplanet imaged with JWST that had not
already been imaged from the ground and is much colder than the gas planets
JWST has studied so far. An 'image' means that the planet appears as a bright
dot on the images and thus represents direct evidence. The transit and radial
velocity methods are indirect evidence, as the planet only reveals itself
through its mediated effect.
JWST observations update previous measurements
The planet revolves around the main component of the nearby triple star system, Epsilon Indi, or Eps Ind for short. Astronomical labeling conventions assign the label Eps Ind A to that primary star, a red dwarf star a little smaller and cooler than the sun. To construct the planet's name, a "b" is appended, resulting in the designation Eps Ind Ab.
This zoom video begins with a wide-angle view of
the sky centered on the star Eps Ind A. It ends with an image of Eps Ind Ab
obtained with the MIRI imager of the JWST. Credit: T. Müller (MPIA/HdA), E.
Matthews (MPIA)
The new JWST data are consistent
with a super-Jupiter having a mass six times that of Jupiter in the solar
system. Eps Ind Ab orbits its host star on an eccentric, elliptical orbit whose
farthest separation from Eps Ind A should range between 20 and 40 astronomical
units.
One astronomical unit is the mean distance between Earth and the sun, approximately 150
million kilometers. The new values differ considerably from earlier studies,
which is why the team chose to call this a "new" planet.
Cool planets, hot science
Only a few cold gas-giant planets
orbiting solar-age stars are known to date, and these have all been inferred
indirectly from radial velocity measurements. By imaging and taking spectra of
the planets, astronomers can study their atmospheres and trace the evolution of
planetary systems compared to computational models.
Studying planets in fully settled
planetary systems helps tie up loose ends concerning the late stages of
planetary evolution and refine our general understanding of planet formation
and evolution.
The recent observations lead the way to finding many more of these cold gas-giant planets. These will allow astronomers to study a new class of exoplanets and compare them to the solar system gas giants.
The inserts show cropped versions of the
MIRI images obtained at mid-infrared wavelengths 10.65 (left) and 15.55
micrometers (right), which depict the area around the star Eps Ind A, whose
position is indicated by star symbols. A coronagraph blocks the light from the
star that would outshine both images. Instead, a new object becomes visible to
the top left. This source is the exoplanet Eps Ind Ab. The background was
obtained from the AllWISE sky survey. Credit: T. Müller (MPIA/HdA), E. Matthews
(MPIA)
How to detect cold gas planets
However, these planets are hard to
find using the classical detection methods. Planets far from their host stars
are typically very cold, unlike the hot Jupiters that circle their stars at
separations of only a few stellar radii. Wide orbits are highly unlikely to be
aligned along the line of sight to produce a transit signal. In addition,
measuring their signals with the radial-velocity method is challenging when
only a small section of the orbit can be monitored.
Earlier studies attempted to
investigate a giant planet orbiting Eps Ind A using radial velocity
measurements. However, extrapolating a small part of the orbit led to incorrect
conclusions about the planet's properties. After all, Eps Ind Ab needs around
200 years to orbit its star. Observations over a few years are insufficient to
determine the orbit with high precision.
Therefore, the team around Matthews
devised a different approach. They wanted to take a picture of the known planet
using a method commonly known as direct imaging. Since exoplanet host stars are
so bright, they outshine any other nearby object. Regular cameras would be
overwhelmed by the blinding starlight.
For this reason, the team employed
JWST's MIRI (Mid-Infrared Instrument) camera equipped with a coronagraph. This
light-blocking mask covers the star like an artificial eclipse. Another
advantage is Eps Ind's proximity to Earth, which is only 12 light-years. The
smaller the distance to the star, the larger the separation between two objects
appears in an image, providing a better chance of mitigating the host star's interference. MIRI was the perfect choice because
it observes in the thermal or mid-infrared, where cold objects shine brightly.
What do we know about Eps Ind Ab?
"We discovered a signal in our
data that did not match the expected exoplanet," says Matthews. The point
of light in the image was not in the predicted location. "But the planet
still appeared to be a giant planet," adds Matthews. However, before being
able to make such an assessment, the astronomers had to exclude the signal was
coming from a background source unrelated to Eps Ind A.
"It is always hard to be
certain, but from the data, it seemed quite unlikely the signal was coming from
an extragalactic background source," explains Leindert Boogaard, another
MPIA scientist and a co-author of the research article.
Indeed, while browsing astronomical
databases for other observations of Eps Ind, the team came across imaging data
from 2019 obtained with the VISIR infrared camera attached to the European
Southern Observatory's (ESO) Very Large Telescope (VLT). After re-analyzing the
images, the team found a faint object precisely at the position where it should
be if the source imaged with JWST belonged to the star Eps Ind A.
The scientists also attempted to
understand the exoplanet atmosphere based on the available images of the planet
in three colors: two from JWST/MIRI and one from VLT/VISIR. Eps Ind Ab is
fainter than expected at short wavelengths. This could indicate substantial
amounts of heavy elements, particularly carbon, which builds molecules such as
methane, carbon dioxide, and carbon monoxide, commonly found in gas-giant
planets. Alternatively, it might indicate that the planet has a cloudy
atmosphere. However, more work is needed to reach a final conclusion.
Plans and prospects
This work is only a first step
towards characterizing Eps Ind Ab. "Our next goal is to obtain spectra
which provide us a detailed fingerprint of the planet's climatology and
chemical composition," says Thomas Henning, Emeritus Director at MPIA,
co-PI of the MIRI instrument, and a co-author of the underlying article.
"In the long run, we hope to also observe other nearby planetary systems to hunt for cold gas giants that may have escaped detection," says Matthews. "Such a survey would serve as the basis for a better understanding of how gas planets form and evolve."
Source: Webb images nearest super-Jupiter, opening a new window to exoplanet research (phys.org)
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