. 24/7 Space News .
Rapid-Born Planets Present 'Baby Picture' Of Our Early Solar System

"The only viable explanation for the absence of gas that could occur during the short lifetime of the star is that a planet - most likely a gas giant like our Jupiter - is orbiting the star and gravitationally "sweeping out" the gas within that distance of the star."

Pasadena CA (SPX) Sep 12, 2005
Using NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope, a team of astronomers led by the University of Rochester has detected gaps ringing the dusty disks around two very young stars, which suggests that gas-giant planets have formed there.

A year ago, these same researchers found evidence of the first "baby planet" around a young star, challenging most astrophysicists's models of giant-planet formation.

The new findings in the Sept. 10 issue of Astrophysical Journal Letters not only reinforce the idea that giant planets like Jupiter form much faster than scientists have traditionally expected, but one of the gas-enshrouded stars, called GM Aurigae, is analogous to our own solar system. At a mere 1 million years of age, the star gives a unique window into how our own world may have come into being.

"GM Aurigae is essentially a much younger version of our Sun, and the gap in its disk is about the same size as the space occupied by our own giant planets," says Dan Watson, professor of physics and astronomy at the University of Rochester and leader of the Spitzer IRS Disks research team. "Looking at it is like looking at baby pictures of our Sun and outer solar system," he says.

"The results pose a challenge to existing theories of giant-planet formation, especially those in which planets build up gradually over millions of years," says Nuria Calvet, professor of astronomy at the University of Michigan and lead author of the paper. "Studies like this one will ultimately help us better understand how our outer planets, as well as others in the universe, form."

The new "baby planets" live within the clearings they have scoured out in the disks around the stars DM Tauri and GM Aurigae, 420 light years away in the Taurus constellation. These disks have been suspected for several years to have central holes that might be due to planet formation.

The new spectra, however, leave no doubt: The gaps are so empty and sharp-edged that planetary formation is by far the most reasonable explanation for their appearance.

The new planets cannot yet be seen directly, but Spitzer's Infrared Spectrograph (IRS) instrument clearly showed that an area of dust surrounding certain stars was missing, strongly suggesting the presence of a planet around each. The dust in a protoplanetary disk is hotter in the center near the star, and so radiates most of its light at shorter wavelengths than the cooler outer reaches of the disk.

The IRS Disks team found that there was an abrupt deficit of light radiating at all short infrared wavelengths, strongly suggesting that the central part of the disk was absent. These stars are very young by stellar standards, about a million years old, still surrounded by their embryonic gas disks.

The only viable explanation for the absence of gas that could occur during the short lifetime of the star is that a planet - most likely a gas giant like our Jupiter - is orbiting the star and gravitationally "sweeping out" the gas within that distance of the star.

As with last year's young-planet findings, these observations represent a challenge to all existing theories of giant-planet formation, especially those of the "core-accretion" models in which such planets are built up by accretion of smaller bodies, which require much more time to build a giant planet than the age of these systems.

The IRS Disks team discovered something else curious about GM Aurigae. Instead of a simple central clearing of the dust disk, as in the other cases studied, GM Aurigae has a clear gap in its disk that separates a dense, dusty outer disk from a tenuous inner one.

This could be either an intermediate stage as the new planet clears out the dust surrounding it and leading to a complete central clearing like the other "baby planet" disks, or it could be the result of multiple planets forming within a short time and sweeping out the dust in a more complex fashion.

GM Aurigae has 1.05 times the mass of our Sun-a near twin - so it will develop into a star very similar to the Sun. If it were overlaid onto our own Solar System, the discovered gap would extend roughly from the orbit of Jupiter (460 million miles) to the orbit of Uranus (1.7 billion miles).

This is the same range in which the gas-giant planets in our own system appear. Small non-gas-giant planets, rocky worlds like Earth, would not sweep up as much material, and so would not be detectable from an absence of dust.

Related Links
University of Rochester
SpaceDaily
Search SpaceDaily
Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Field Guide For Confirming New Earth-Like Planets Described
St Louis MO (SPX) Sep 09, 2005
Bruce Fegley, Ph.D., Washington University professor of earth and planetary sciences in Arts & Sciences, and Laura Schaefer, laboratory assistant, have used thermochemical equilibrium calculations to model the chemistry of silicate vapor and steam-rich atmospheres formed when earth-like planets are undergoing accretion .

---------------------------------------------------------
New from Telescopes.com!

It's new. And it's downright terrific!

Celestron's CPC Schmidt-Cassegrain telescope is the scope you've been waiting for! It offers new alignment technology, advanced engineering, and bold new design at a new, low price!

In fact, Celestron's Professional Computerized (CPC) scope with revolutionary SkyAlign Alignment Technology redefines everything that amateur astronomers are looking for. It offers quick and simple alignment, GPS technology, unsurpassed optical quality, ease of use, advanced ergonomics, enhanced computerization and, most important, affordability.

Want to view M-31 tonight? One button takes you there!

Shop for telescopes online at Telescopes.com! today!
------------------------------------------------------------







  • World's Third Space Tourist Ready For Journey
  • A September Surprise For China's Second Manned Launch - Shenzhou 6
  • Russian and Ukrainian Space Agencies Outline Space Exploration Vision For 2007-2011
  • The Next Space Age Is Coming

  • NASA May Use Hawaiian Ash In Mars Training
  • The Biblis Patera Volcano
  • Dead And Alive: Slowly-Dying Mars Still Holds Surprises
  • Water Detection At Gusev Described - Chemical Proof For Two Wet Scenarios

  • Russia Launches Canadian Satellite
  • Historic Tower At Launch Complex 13 Toppled
  • Russia Could Initiate Establishment Of International Space Association
  • Sea Launch Signs With Panamsat For Second Land Launch Mission

  • Using Satellites To Investigate 'Greening' Trends Across Canada And Alaska
  • Appreciating The CryoSat Challenge - Guy Ratier, Project Manager
  • CryoSat Arrives Safely At Plesetsk Launch Site, In Russia
  • CryoSat Flight Control Team In Intensive Training

  • Hubble Makes Movie Of Neptune's Dynamic Atmosphere
  • Gemini Samples Spectrum Of 2003 UB313: Pluto-Like Surface
  • Scientists Discover Tenth Planet
  • Charon's Occultation Of Star Oberseved For Second Time Only

  • Astronomers Discover Fastest Intergalactic Space Traveller
  • XMM-Newton Probes Formation Of Galaxy Clusters
  • How to Build A Big Star
  • Survey Of 4,000 Galaxies Finds "Downsizing" On A Cosmic Scale

  • Lunar Probe Program Facing Three Major Difficulties
  • Taking A Radioactive Bath On The Moon
  • This Is Not Your Father's Moon Buggy
  • European Probe Sniffs Out A Site For Lunar Outpost

  • Father, Son Reflect On History, Future Of GPS
  • India Signs Agreement To Take Part In Europe's Galileo Satellite Project
  • Satellite Navigation Tracks Rally Cars
  • Orbital Contracted For Vehicle Tracking By Culver City, California

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement