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    Home»Space»Astronomers Uncover a Baffling “Cosmic Mystery” – A Giant Planet As Fluffy as Cotton Candy
    Space

    Astronomers Uncover a Baffling “Cosmic Mystery” – A Giant Planet As Fluffy as Cotton Candy

    By University of LiègeMay 19, 20242 Comments5 Mins Read
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    Fluffy Exoplanet Art Concept
    WASP-193b, a new exoplanet, is 50% larger than Jupiter but seven times less massive, with an extremely low density similar to cotton candy. Discovered by WASP and confirmed with observatories in Chile, its formation challenges current planetary theories and demands further study. Credit: SciTechDaily.com

    This exoplanet is larger but seven times less massive than Jupiter and is the second least dense planet discovered to date.

    An international team led by researchers from the EXOTIC Laboratory of the University of Liège, in collaboration with MIT and the Astrophysics Institute in Andalusia, has just discovered WASP-193b, an extraordinarily low-density giant planet orbiting a distant Sun-like star.

    A newly discovered planet, located approximately 1,200 light-years from Earth, is 50% larger than Jupiter but seven times less massive. This results in it having an extremely low density comparable to that of cotton candy.

    “WASP-193b is the second least dense planet discovered to date, after Kepler-51d, which is much smaller,” explains Khalid Barkaoui, a Postdcotral Researcher at ULiège’s EXOTIC Laboratory and first author of the article published in Nature Astronomy. Its extremely low density makes it a real anomaly among the more than five thousand exoplanets discovered to date. This extremely-low-density cannot be reproduced by standard models of irradiated gas giants, even under the unrealistic assumption of a coreless structure.”

    Initial Discovery and Observations

    The new planet was initially spotted by the Wide Angle Search for Planets (WASP), an international collaboration of academic institutions that together operated two robotic observatories, one in the northern hemisphere and the other in the south. Each observatory used an array of wide-angle cameras to measure the brightness of thousands of individual stars across the entire sky.

    In data taken between 2006 and 2008, and again from 2011 to 2012, the WASP-South observatory detected periodic transits, or dips in light, from the star WASP-193. Astronomers determined that the star’s periodic dips in brightness were consistent with a planet passing in front of the star every 6.25 days. The scientists measured the amount of light the planet blocked with each transit, which gave them an estimate of the planet’s size.

    WASP-193b vs Cotton Candy
    Artist’s impression of the density of WASP-193b compared to candyfloss. Credit: University of Liege

    Detailed Measurements and Surprising Density

    The team used then the TRAPPIST-South and SPECULOOS-South observatories — directed by Michaël Gillon, FNRS Research Director and astrophysicist at ULiège — located in the Atacama Desert in Chile to measure the planetary signal in different wavelengths and to validate the planetary nature of the eclipsing object. Finally, they also used spectroscopic observations collected by the HARPS and CORALIE spectrographs – also located in Chile (ESO)- to measure the mass of the planet.

    To their great surprise, the accumulated measurements revealed an extremely low density for the planet. Its mass and its size, they calculated, were about 0.14 and 1.5 that of Jupiter, respectively. The resulting density came out to about 0.059 grams per cubic centimeter.

    Jupiter’s density, in contrast, is about 1.33 grams per cubic centimeter; and Earth is a more substantial 5.51 grams per cubic centimeter. One of the materials closest in density to the new, puffy planet, is cotton candy, which has a density of about 0.05 grams per cubic centimeter.

    The Mystery of WASP-193b’s Composition

    “The planet is so light that it’s difficult to think of an analogous, solid-state material,” says Julien de Wit, professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and co-author. “The reason why it’s close to cotton candy is because both are pretty much air. The planet is basically super fluffy.”

    The researchers suspect that the new planet is made mostly from hydrogen and helium, like most other gas giants in the galaxy. For WASP-193b, these gases likely form a hugely inflated atmosphere that extends tens of thousands of kilometers farther than Jupiter’s own atmosphere. Exactly how a planet can inflate so much is a question that no existing theory of planetary formation can yet answer. It certainly requires a significant deposit of energy deep into the planet’s interior, but the details of the mechanism are not yet understood.

    Future Research and Challenges

    “We don’t know where to put this planet in all the formation theories we have right now, because it’s an outlier of all of them. We cannot explain how this planet was formed. Looking more closely at its atmosphere will allow us to constrain an evolutionary path of this planet, adds Francisco Pozuelos, astronomer at the Instituto de Astrofisica de Andalucia (IAA-CSIC, Granada, Spain).”

    “WASP-193b is a cosmic mystery. Solving it will require some more observational and theoretical work, notably to measure its atmospheric properties with the JWST space telescope and to confront them to different theoretical mechanisms that possibly result in such an extreme inflation,” concludes Khalid Barkaoui.

    For more on this discovery, see Super Fluffy “Cotton Candy” Exoplanet Discovery Shocks Scientists.

    Reference: “An extended low-density atmosphere around the Jupiter-sized planet WASP-193 b” by Khalid Barkaoui, Francisco J. Pozuelos, Coel Hellier, Barry Smalley, Louise D. Nielsen, Prajwal Niraula, Michaël Gillon, Julien de Wit, Simon Müller, Caroline Dorn, Ravit Helled, Emmanuel Jehin, Brice-Olivier Demory, Valerie Van Grootel, Abderahmane Soubkiou, Mourad Ghachoui, David. R. Anderson, Zouhair Benkhaldoun, Francois Bouchy, Artem Burdanov, Laetitia Delrez, Elsa Ducrot, Lionel Garcia, Abdelhadi Jabiri, Monika Lendl, Pierre F. L. Maxted, Catriona A. Murray, Peter Pihlmann Pedersen, Didier Queloz, Daniel Sebastian, Oliver Turner, Stephane Udry, Mathilde Timmermans, Amaury H. M. J. Triaud and Richard G. West, 14 May 2024, Nature Astronomy.
    DOI: 10.1038/s41550-024-02259-y

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    Astronomy Astrophysics Exoplanet Planets Popular University of Liege
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    2 Comments

    1. Alec Rawls on May 19, 2024 6:38 pm

      It’s hollow, and the women inside are after Spock’s brain.

      Reply
    2. Dave Vaught on May 20, 2024 12:42 pm

      The Artists impression of the weight of the planet is giving serious AI generation vibes.
      Even if its not you should really do better.

      Reply
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