NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope has captured direct images of multiple gas giant planets within an iconic planetary system. HR 8799, a young system 130 light-years away, has long been a key target for planet formation studies.
The observations indicate that the
well-studied planets of HR 8799 are rich in carbon dioxide gas. This provides
strong evidence that the system’s four giant planets formed much like Jupiter
and Saturn, by slowly building solid cores that attract gas from within a
protoplanetary disk, a process known as core accretion.
The results also confirm that Webb
can infer the chemistry of exoplanet atmospheres through imaging. This
technique complements Webb’s powerful spectroscopic instruments, which can
resolve the atmospheric composition.
“By spotting these strong carbon
dioxide features, we have shown there is a sizable fraction of heavier
elements, like carbon, oxygen, and iron, in these planets’ atmospheres,” said
William Balmer, of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. “Given what we know
about the star they orbit, that likely indicates they formed via core
accretion, which is an exciting conclusion for planets that we can directly
see.”
Balmer is the lead author of the
study announcing the results published today in The Astrophysical Journal. Balmer and their team’s analysis also includes
Webb’s observation of a system 97 light-years away called 51 Eridani.
Image A: HR 8799 (NIRCam Image)
NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope has provided the
clearest look in the infrared yet at the iconic multi-planet system HR 8799.
The closest planet to the star, HR 8799 e, orbits 1.5 billion miles from its
star, which in our solar system would be located between the orbit of Saturn
and Neptune. The furthest, HR 8799 b, orbits around 6.3 billion miles from the
star, more than twice Neptune’s orbital distance. Colors are applied to filters
from Webb’s NIRCam (Near-Infrared Camera), revealing their intrinsic differences.
A star symbol marks the location of the host star HR 8799, whose light has been
blocked by the coronagraph. In this image, the color blue is assigned to 4.1
micron light, green to 4.3 micron light, and red to the 4.6 micron light.
NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, W. Balmer
(JHU), L. Pueyo (STScI), M. Perrin (STScI)
Image B: 51 Eridani (NIRCam Image)
Webb’s NIRCam (Near-Infrared Camera) captured this
image of 51 Eridani b (also referred to as 51 Eri b), a cool, young exoplanet
that orbits 890 million miles from its star, similar to Saturn’s orbit in our
solar system. The 51 Eridani system is 97 light-years from Earth. This image
includes filters representing 4.1-micron light as red. The background red in
this image is not light from other planets, but a result of light subtraction
during image processing.
NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, W. Balmer
(JHU), L. Pueyo (STScI), M. Perrin (STScI)
HR 8799 is a young system about 30 million years old, a fraction of our
solar system’s 4.6 billion years. Still hot from their tumultuous formation,
the planets within HR 8799 emit large amounts of infrared light that give
scientists valuable data on how they formed.
Giant planets can take shape in two
ways: by slowly building solid cores with heavier elements that attract gas,
just like the giants in our solar system, or when particles of gas rapidly
coalesce into massive objects from a young star’s cooling disk, which is made
mostly of the same kind of material as the star. The first process is called
core accretion, and the second is called disk instability. Knowing which
formation model is more common can give scientists clues to distinguish between
the types of planets they find in other systems.
“Our hope with this kind of
research is to understand our own solar system, life, and ourselves in the
comparison to other exoplanetary systems, so we can contextualize our
existence,” Balmer said. “We want to take pictures of other solar systems and
see how they’re similar or different when compared to ours. From there, we can
try to get a sense of how weird our solar system really is—or how normal.”
Image C: Young Gas Giant HR 8799 e
(NIRCam Spectrum)
This graph shows a spectrum of one of the planets in
the HR 8799 system, HR 8799 e. Spectral fingerprints of carbon dioxide and
carbon monoxide appear in data collected by Webb’s NIRCam (Near-Infrared
Camera).
NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, J. Olmsted
(STScI)
Of the nearly 6,000 exoplanets
discovered, few have been directly imaged, as even giant planets are many
thousands of times fainter than their stars. The images of HR 8799 and 51
Eridani were made possible by Webb’s NIRCam (Near-Infrared Camera) coronagraph,
which blocks light from bright stars to reveal otherwise hidden worlds.
This technology allowed the team to look
for infrared light emitted by the planets in wavelengths that are absorbed by
specific gases. The team found that the four HR 8799 planets contain more heavy
elements than previously thought.
The team is paving the way for more
detailed observations to determine whether objects they see orbiting other
stars are truly giant planets or objects such as brown dwarfs, which form like
stars but don’t accumulate enough mass to ignite nuclear fusion.
“We have other lines of evidence that
hint at these four HR 8799 planets forming using this bottom-up approach” said
Laurent Pueyo, an astronomer at the Space Telescope Science Institute in
Baltimore, who co-led the work. “How common is this for planets we can directly
image? We don't know yet, but we're proposing more Webb observations to answer
that question.”
“We knew Webb could measure colors of
the outer planets in directly imaged systems,” added Rémi Soummer, director of
STScI’s Russell B. Makidon Optics Lab and former lead for Webb coronagraph
operations. “We have been waiting for 10 years to confirm that our finely tuned
operations of the telescope would also allow us to access the inner planets.
Now the results are in and we can do interesting science with it.”
The NIRCam observations of HR 8799 and 51 Eridani were conducted as part of Guaranteed Time Observations programs 1194 and 1412 respectively.
Source: NASA’s Webb Images Young, Giant Exoplanets, Detects Carbon Dioxide - NASA Science
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