A planetary system described as abnormal, chaotic, and strange by researchers has come into clearer view with NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope. Using Webb’s NIRCam (Near-Infrared Camera), researchers have successfully imaged one of two known planets surrounding the star 14 Herculis, located 60 light-years away from Earth in our own Milky Way galaxy.
The exoplanet, 14 Herculis c, is
one of the coldest imaged to date. While there are nearly 6,000 exoplanets that
have been discovered, only a small number of those have been directly imaged,
most of those being very hot (think hundreds or even thousands of degrees
Fahrenheit). The new data suggests 14 Herculis c, which weighs about 7 times
the planet Jupiter, is as cool as 26 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 3 degrees
Celsius).
Image: 14 Herculis c (NIRCam)
This image of exoplanet 14 Herculis c was taken by
NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope’s NIRCam (Near-Infrared Camera). A star
symbol marks the location of the host star 14 Herculis, whose light has been
blocked by a coronagraph on NIRCam (shown here as a dark circle outlined in
white).
NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, W. Balmer (JHU), D. Bardalez
Gagliuffi (Amherst College)
The team’s results covering 14 Herculis
c have been accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal Letters and
were presented in a press conference Tuesday at the 246th meeting of the
American Astronomical Society in Anchorage, Alaska.
“The colder an exoplanet, the harder it
is to image, so this is a totally new regime of study that Webb has unlocked
with its extreme sensitivity in the infrared,” said William Balmer, co-first
author of the new paper and graduate student at Johns Hopkins University. “We
are now able to add to the catalog of not just hot, young exoplanets imaged,
but older exoplanets that are far colder than we’ve directly seen before Webb.”
Webb’s image of 14 Herculis c also
provides insights into a planetary system unlike most others studied in detail
with Webb and other ground- and space-based `observatories. The central star,
14 Herculis, is almost Sun-like – it is similar in age and temperature to our
own Sun, but a little less massive and cooler.
There are two planets in this system – 14 Herculis b is closer to the star, and covered by the coronagraphic mask in
the Webb image. These planets don’t orbit the host star on the same plane like
our solar system. Instead, they cross each other like an ‘X’, with the star
being at the center. That is, the orbital planes of the two planets are
inclined relative to one another at an angle of about 40 degrees. The planets
tug and pull at one another as they orbit the star.
This is the first time an image has ever
been snapped of an exoplanet in such a mis-aligned system.
Scientists are working on several
theories for just how the planets in this system got so “off track.” One of the
leading concepts is that the planets scattered after a third planet was
violently ejected from the system early in its formation.
“The early evolution of our own solar
system was dominated by the movement and pull of our own gas giants,” added
Balmer. “They threw around asteroids and rearranged other planets. Here, we are
seeing the aftermath of a more violent planetary crime scene. It reminds us
that something similar could have happened to our own solar system, and that
the outcomes for small planets like Earth are often dictated by much larger
forces.”
Understanding the Planet’s
Characteristics With Webb
Webb’s new data is giving
researchers further insights into not just the temperature of 14 Herculis c,
but other details about the planet’s orbit and atmosphere.
Findings indicate the planet orbits
around 1.4 billion miles from the host star in a highly elliptical, or
football-shaped orbit, closer in than previous estimates. This is around 15
times farther from the Sun than Earth. On average, this would put 14 Herculis c
between Saturn and Uranus in our solar system.
The planet’s brightness at 4.4
microns measured using Webb’s coronagraph, combined with the known mass of the planet and age
of the system, hints at some complex atmospheric dynamics at play.
“If a planet of a certain mass
formed 4 billion years ago, then cooled over time because it doesn't have a
source of energy keeping it warm, we can predict how hot it should be today,”
said Daniella C. Bardalez Gagliuffi of Amherst College, co-first author on the
paper with Balmer. “Added information, like the perceived brightness in direct
imaging, would in theory support this estimate of the planet’s temperature.”
However, what researchers expect
isn’t always reflected in the results. With 14 Herculis c, the brightness at
this wavelength is fainter than expected for an object of this mass and age.
The research team can explain this discrepancy, though. It’s called carbon
disequilibrium chemistry, something often seen in brown dwarfs.
“This exoplanet is so cold, the
best comparisons we have that are well-studied are the coldest brown dwarfs,”
Bardalez Gagliuffi explained. “In those objects, like with 14 Herculis c, we
see carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide existing at temperatures where we should
see methane. This is explained by churning in the atmosphere. Molecules made at
warmer temperatures in the lower atmosphere are brought to the cold, upper
atmosphere very quickly.”
Researchers hope Webb’s image of 14
Herculis c is just the beginning of a new phase of investigation into this
strange system.
While the small dot of light
obtained by Webb contains a plethora of information, future spectroscopic studies of 14 Herculis could better constrain the
atmospheric properties of this interesting planet and help researchers
understand the dynamics and formation pathways of the system.
The James Webb Space Telescope is
the world’s premier space science observatory. Webb is solving mysteries in our
solar system, looking beyond to distant worlds around other stars, and probing
the mysterious structures and origins of our universe and our place in it. Webb
is an international program led by NASA with its partners, ESA (European Space
Agency) and CSA (Canadian Space Agency).
To learn more about Webb, visit: https://science.nasa.gov/webb
Source: Frigid Exoplanet in Strange Orbit Imaged by NASA’s Webb - NASA Science
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