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It circles the star Fomalhaut, pronounced FUM-al-HUT, which is Arabic for "mouth of the fish." It's in the constellation Piscis Austrinus and is relatively close by
-- a mere 148 trillion miles away, practically a next-door neighbor by galactic standards. The planet's temperature is around 260 degrees, but that's cool by comparison to other exoplanets. The planet is only about 200 million years old, a baby compared to the more than 4 billion-year-old planets in our solar system. That's important to astronomers because they can study what Earth and planets in our solar system may have been like in their infancy, said Paul Kalas at the University of California, Berkeley. Kalas led the team using Hubble to discover Fomalhaut's planet. One big reason the picture looks fuzzy is that the star Fomalhaut is 100 million times brighter than its planet. The team led by Macintosh at Lawrence Livermore found its planets a little earlier, spotting the first one in 2007, but taking extra time to confirm the trio of planets circling a star in the Pegasus constellation. The star is about 767 trillion miles away, but visible with binoculars. It's called HR 8799, and the three planets orbiting it are seven to 10 times larger than Jupiter, Macintosh said. "I've been doing this for eight years, and after eight years we get three at once," he said. ___ On the Net: Science: http://www.sciencemag.org/ Hubble Space Telescope: http://hubblesite.org/ Gemini Observatory: http://www.gemini.edu/ Exoplanet encyclopedia: http://exoplanet.eu/
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