Observations from NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope have provided a surprising twist in the narrative surrounding what is believed to be the first star observed in the act of swallowing a planet. The new findings suggest that the star actually did not swell to envelop a planet as previously hypothesized. Instead, Webb’s observations show the planet’s orbit shrank over time, slowly bringing the planet closer to its demise until it was engulfed in full.
“Because this is such a novel
event, we didn’t quite know what to expect when we decided to point this
telescope in its direction,” said Ryan Lau, lead author of the new paper and
astronomer at NSF NOIRLab (National Science Foundation National Optical-Infrared
Astronomy Research Laboratory) in Tucson, Arizona. “With its high-resolution
look in the infrared, we are learning valuable insights about the final fates
of planetary systems, possibly including our own.”
Two instruments aboard Webb
conducted the post-mortem of the scene – Webb’s MIRI (Mid-Infrared Instrument)
and NIRSpec (Near-Infrared Spectrograph). The researchers were able to come to
their conclusion using a two-pronged investigative approach.
Image A:
Planetary Engulfment Illustration
NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope’s observations of
what is thought to be the first-ever recorded planetary engulfment event
revealed a hot accretion disk surrounding the star, with an expanding cloud of
cooler dust enveloping the scene. Webb also revealed that the star did not
swell to swallow the planet, but the planet’s orbit actually slowly depreciated
over time, as seen in this artist’s concept.
NASA, ESA, CSA, R. Crawford
(STScI)
Constraining the How
The star at the center of this
scene is located in the Milky Way galaxy about 12,000 light-years away from
Earth.
The brightening event, formally
called ZTF SLRN-2020, was originally spotted as a flash of optical light using
the Zwicky Transient Facility at Caltech's Palomar Observatory in San Diego,
California. Data from NASA’s NEOWISE (Near-Earth Object Wide-field Infrared
Survey Explorer) showed the star actually brightened in the infrared a year
before the optical light flash, hinting at the presence of dust. This initial 2023 investigation led researchers to believe that the star was
more Sun-like, and had been in the process of aging into a red giant over
hundreds of thousands of years, slowly expanding as it exhausted its hydrogen
fuel.
However, Webb’s MIRI told a
different story. With powerful sensitivity and spatial resolution, Webb was
able to precisely measure the hidden emission from the star and its immediate
surroundings, which lie in a very crowded region of space. The researchers
found the star was not as bright as it should have been if it had evolved into
a red giant, indicating there was no swelling to engulf the planet as once
thought.
Reconstructing the Scene
Researchers suggest that, at one
point, the planet was about Jupiter-sized, but orbited quite close to the star,
even closer than Mercury’s orbit around our Sun. Over millions of years, the
planet orbited closer and closer to the star, leading to the catastrophic
consequence.
“The planet eventually started to
graze the star's atmosphere. Then it was a runaway process of falling in faster
from that moment,” said team member Morgan MacLeod of the Harvard-Smithsonian
Center for Astrophysics and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in
Cambridge, Massachusetts. “The planet, as it’s falling in, started to sort of
smear around the star.”
In its final splashdown, the planet
would have blasted gas away from the outer layers of the star. As it expanded
and cooled off, the heavy elements in this gas condensed into cold dust over
the next year.
Inspecting the Leftovers
While the researchers did expect an
expanding cloud of cooler dust around the star, a look with the powerful
NIRSpec revealed a hot circumstellar disk of molecular gas closer in.
Furthermore, Webb’s high spectral resolution was able to detect certain molecules
in this accretion disk, including carbon monoxide.
“With such a transformative
telescope like Webb, it was hard for me to have any expectations of what we’d
find in the immediate surroundings of the star,” said Colette Salyk of Vassar
College in Poughkeepsie, New York, an exoplanet researcher and co-author on the
new paper. “I will say, I could not have expected seeing what has the
characteristics of a planet-forming region, even though planets are not forming
here, in the aftermath of an engulfment.”
The ability to characterize this
gas opens more questions for researchers about what actually happened once the
planet was fully swallowed by the star.
“This is truly the precipice of
studying these events. This is the only one we've observed in action, and this
is the best detection of the aftermath after things have settled back down,”
Lau said. “We hope this is just the start of our sample.”
These observations, taken under
Guaranteed Time Observation program 1240, which was specifically designed to investigate a
family of mysterious, sudden, infrared brightening events, were among the first
Target of Opportunity programs performed by Webb. These types of study are
reserved for events, like supernova explosions, that are expected to occur, but
researchers don’t exactly know when or where. NASA’s space telescopes are part
of a growing, international network that stands ready to witness these fleeting
changes, to help us understand how the universe works.
Researchers expect to add to their
sample and identify future events like this using the upcoming Vera C. Rubin
Observatory and NASA’s Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope, which will survey
large areas of the sky repeatedly to look for changes over time.
The team’s findings appear today
in The Astrophysical Journal.
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: NASA Webb’s Autopsy of Planet Swallowed by Star Yields Surprise - NASA Science
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