Âé¶¹ÒùÔº


This article has been reviewed according to Science X's and . have highlighted the following attributes while ensuring the content's credibility:

fact-checked

peer-reviewed publication

trusted source

written by researcher(s)

proofread

Massive planet too big for its own sun pushes astronomers to rethink exoplanet formation

Massive planet too big for its own sun pushes astronomers to rethink exoplanet formation
LHS 3154b, a newly discovered massive planet that should be too big to exist. Credit: Pennsylvania State University

Imagine you're a farmer searching for eggs in the chicken coop—but instead of a chicken egg, you find an ostrich egg, much larger than anything a chicken could lay.

That's a little how , more than 13 times heavier than Earth, around a cool, dim red star, nine times less massive than Earth's sun, earlier this year.

The smaller star, called an M star, is not only smaller than the sun in Earth's solar system, but it's 100 times less luminous. Such a star should not have the necessary amount of material in its planet-forming to birth such a .

The Habitable Zone Planet Finder

Over the past decade, our team designed and built a new instrument at Penn State capable of detecting the light from these dim, cool stars at wavelengths beyond the sensitivity of the human eye—in the near-infrared—where such .

Attached to the 10-meter Hobby-Eberly Telescope in West Texas, our instrument, dubbed the , can measure the subtle change in a star's velocity as a planet gravitationally tugs on it. This technique, called the Doppler radial velocity technique, is great for detecting exoplanets.

"" is a combination of the words extrasolar and planet, so the term applies to any planet-sized body in orbit around a star that isn't Earth's sun.

Thirty years ago, Doppler radial velocity observations enabled the discovery of , the first known exoplanet orbiting a sunlike star. In the ensuing decades, astronomers like us have improved this technique. These measurements have an important goal: to enable the discovery of rocky in , the regions around stars where liquid water can be sustained on the planetary surface.

The Doppler technique doesn't yet have the capabilities to discover habitable zone planets the mass of the Earth around stars the size of the sun. But the cool and dim M stars show a larger Doppler signature for the same Earth-size planet. The lower mass of the star leads to it getting tugged more by the orbiting planet. And the lower luminosity leads to a and a shorter orbit, which also makes the planet easier to detect.

An artist’s rendering of LHS 3154b. Credit: Abby Minnich

Planets around these smaller stars were the planets our team designed the Habitable Zone Planet Finder to discover. Our new discovery, , of a massive planet orbiting closely around the cool dim M star LHS 3154—the ostrich egg in the chicken coop—came as a real surprise.

LHS 3154b: The planet that should not exist

Planets form in disks composed of gas and dust. These disks pull together dust grains that grow into pebbles and eventually combine to form a solid planetary core. Once the core is formed, the planet can gravitationally pull in the solid dust, as well as surrounding gas such as hydrogen and helium. But it needs a lot of mass and materials to do this successfully. This way to form planets is called .

A star as low mass as LHS 3154, nine times less massive than the sun, should have a correspondingly low-mass planet forming disk.

A typical disk around such a low-mass star should simply not have enough solid materials or mass to be able to make a core heavy enough to create such a planet. From our team conducted, we concluded that such a planet needs a disk at least 10 times more massive than typically assumed .

A different planet formation theory, —where gas and dust in the disk undergo a direct collapse to form a planet—also struggles to explain the formation of such a planet without a very massive disk.

Planets around the most common stars

Cool, dim M stars are . In DC comics lore, Superman's home world, .

Astronomers know, from discoveries made with Habitable Zone Planet Finder and other instruments, that giant planets in close-in orbits around the most massive M stars are than those around Sunlike stars. And we know of no such massive planets in close orbits around the least massive M stars—until the discovery of LHS 3154b.

Understanding how planets form around our coolest neighbors will help us understand both how planets form in general and how rocky worlds around the most numerous types of stars form and evolve. This line of research could also help astronomers understand whether M stars are capable of supporting life.

Journal information: Science

Provided by The Conversation

This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .The Conversation

Citation: Massive planet too big for its own sun pushes astronomers to rethink exoplanet formation (2023, December 2) retrieved 29 April 2025 from /news/2023-12-massive-planet-big-sun-astronomers.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

Discovery of planet too big for its sun throws off solar system formation models

90 shares

Feedback to editors