This large young planet is forming around a star called AB
Aurigae that is about 2.4 times the mass of the sun and located
in our Milky Way galaxy 520 light years from Earth, researchers
said on Wednesday. A light year is the distance light travels in
a year, 5.9 trillion miles (9.5 trillion km).
The scientists used the European Southern Observatory's Very
Large Telescope in Chile to spot a spiral structure within the
swirling disk around AB Aurigae generated by the presence of a
planet. They detected a "twist" pattern of gas and dust in the
spiral structure marking where the planet was coalescing.
"It takes several million years for a planet to be in its final
stage, so birth is not well defined in time. However, we can say
that we were likely able to catch a planet in the process of
formation," said Observatoire de Paris astronomer Anthony
Boccaletti, who led the research published in the journal
Astronomy & Astrophysics.
More than 4,000 planets have been discovered orbiting stars
beyond our solar system. Scientists are eager to learn more
about how they are born as cold gas and dust consolidate in
these disks surrounding new stars.
The planet is located about 30 times further from its star than
Earth's distance from the sun - about the distance of the planet
Neptune in our solar system, Boccaletti said. It appears to be a
large gas planet, not a rocky planet like Earth or Mars, and may
be more massive than our solar system's largest planet Jupiter,
Boccaletti added.
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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