Astronomers have discovered a hungry baby planet gobbling up material around an infant star located around 430 light-years from Earth. The planet has been given the suitably cute name WISPIT 2b.
WISPIT 2b is estimated to be a gas giant around the size of Jupiter and around just 5 million years old. If this seems ancient, remember our solar system is around 4.6 billion years old. The extrasolar planet, or “exoplanet,” is carving a channel in the planet-forming disk of gas and dust, or “protoplanetary disk,” around its young parent star WISPIT 2 like a cosmic Pac-Man as it gathers material.
The exoplanet is the first confirmed detection of a planet in a multi-ringed protoplanetary disk, a disk that contains multiple gaps and channels, almost akin to a vinyl record.
Imaged using the Very Large Telescope (VLT) located in the Atacama Desert in Chile, WISPIT 2b is also just the second young planet confirmed around a star that is essentially analogous to a young sun.
This makes the study of WISPIT 2b and its home protoplanetary disk, which is as wide as around 380 times the distance between Earth and the sun, the ideal laboratory to study interactions between planets and disks and the subsequent evolution of such systems.
“Discovering this planet was an amazing experience – we were incredibly lucky,” team leader and Leiden University researcher Richelle van Capelleveen said in a statement. “WISPIT 2, a young version of our sun, is located in a little-studied group of young stars, and we did not expect to find such a spectacular system. This system will likely be a benchmark for years to come.”
The team captured an infrared image of the planet sitting in a gap in the disk as they conducted an investigation designed to discover if gas giants on wide orbits are more common around young or old stars. This was possible because the infant planet is still hot and glowing following its formation.
“We used these really short snapshot observations of many young stars – only a few minutes per object – to determine if we could see a little dot of light next to them that is caused by a planet,” said Christian Ginski, lecturer at the School of Natural Sciences, University of Galway. “However, in the case of this star, we…
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