Space telescope offers rare glimpse of Earth-sized rocky exoplanet
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[August 20, 2019]
By Steve Gorman
(Reuters) - Direct observations from a NASA
space telescope have for the first time revealed the atmospheric void of
a rocky, Earth-sized world beyond our own solar system orbiting the most
common type of star in the galaxy, according to a study released on
Monday.
The research, published in the scientific journal Nature, also shows the
distant planet's surface is likely to resemble the barren exterior of
the Earth's moon or Mercury, possibly covered in dark volcanic rock.
The planet lies about 48.6 light years from Earth and is one of more
than 4,000 so-called exoplanets identified over the past two decades
circling distant stars in our home galaxy, the Milky Way.
Known to astronomers as LHS 3844b, this exoplanet about 1.3 times the
size of Earth is locked in a tight orbit - one revolution every 11 hours
- around a small, relatively cool star called a red dwarf, the most
prevalent and long-lived type of star in the galaxy.
The planet's lack of atmosphere is probably due to intense radiation
from its parent red dwarf, which, though dim by stellar standards, also
emits high levels of ultraviolet light, the study says.
The study will likely add to a debate among astronomers about whether
the search for life-sustaining conditions beyond our solar system should
focus on exoplanets around red dwarfs - accounting for 75% of all stars
in the Milky Way - or less common, larger, hotter stars more like our
own sun.
The principal finding is that it probably possesses little if any
atmosphere - a conclusion reached by measuring the temperature
difference between the side of the planet perpetually facing its star,
and the cooler, dark side facing away from it.
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An artist's conception shows NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope as it
begins its "Beyond" mission phase on Oct. 1, 2016.
NASA/JPL-Caltech/T. Pyle (IPAC)/Handout via REUTERS
A negligible amount of heat carried between the two sides indicates
a lack of winds that would otherwise be present to transfer warmth
around the planet.
"The temperature contrast on this planet is about as big as it can
possibly be," said researcher Laura Kreidberg of the
Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge,
Massachusetts. She is lead author of the study.
Similar analysis previously was used to determine that another
exoplanet, 55 Cancri e, about twice as big as Earth and believed to
be half-covered in molten lava, likely possesses an atmosphere
thicker than Earth's. This exoplanet, unlike LHS 3844b, orbits a
sun-like star.
The planet in the latest study was detected last year by NASA's
newly launched Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite, an orbiting
telescope that pinpoints distant worlds by spotting periodic, dips
in the light observed from their parent stars when an object passes
in front of them.
But it was follow-up observations from another orbiting instrument,
the Spitzer Space Telescope, which can detect infrared light
directly from an exoplanet, that provided new insights about its
features.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Bill Tarrant
and Lisa Shumaker)
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