Just a day after announcing the discovery of the
first Earth-size planets ever detected outside our solar system,
scientists have confirmed the existence of two even smaller worlds.
There is something very unusual about these objects, however.
It appears that they are the roasted remains of planets that spent a period of time inside the outer layers of their star.
Scientists tell Nature magazine that these worlds are therefore likely to have been much bigger in the past.
Once again, these worlds were identified using data from NASA’s Kepler telescope, which was
put in orbit in 2009 with the specific goal of hunting down small planets.
put in orbit in 2009 with the specific goal of hunting down small planets.
This latest haul was detected around a star known as
KIC 05807616. The worlds have diameters that are just 76 per cent and 87
per cent of that of Earth.
What is interesting about KIC 05807616 is that it is a former red giant, a so-called “hot B subdwarf.”
Red giant refers to a late phase in a star’s life when it has begun to exhaust its hydrogen fuel.
Deep spiral
A star in this phase will expand, its outer layers
will cool, and it will glow a more reddish color. Our own sun will go
through this phase in a few billion years’ time.
But the consequence is that any planets that happen
to be orbiting relatively close to the star will likely be engulfed in
its expanding envelope of gas.
This will happen to the Earth, and it appears to have
been the case with the newly detected planets named KOI 55.01 and KOI
55.02, which whip around their host star in just a matter of hours.
Their presence so close to KIC 05807616 is a telltale sign of what must have happened to them.
Going into the expanding outer layers of a star would
have severely eroded the worlds, ripping away any gaseous or liquid
material.
What the team sees in its data are probably just the
remnant cores of what were once giant gas planets not unlike our own
Jupiter.
“The details of all this are of course uncertain and
would require dedicated modeling, but we expect that, due to friction
and tidal dissipation, the engulfed planets must have spiraled in even
deeper inside the star,” said lead researcher Stephane Charpinet of
Toulouse University in France. “In the process, their volatile layers
have probably been evaporated or pulled away by the friction. At the
same time, the envelope of the star may have expanded further and
accelerated its rotation due to this inward motion of the planets. Then,
the system may have stabilized into a common envelope configuration,
where the planets settle on stable orbits inside the red giant.
The red giant envelope was ultimately expelled almost completely due to increased mass loss, leading to the formation of the hot subdwarf B star that we have observed.”
The red giant envelope was ultimately expelled almost completely due to increased mass loss, leading to the formation of the hot subdwarf B star that we have observed.”
The discovery was made while the scientists were
engaged in asteroseismology – the practice of studying a star’s
pulsations to gauge its inner structure. It is akin to seismology, which
studies the interior of the Earth from the oscillations in rock
generated by earthquakes.
But as they were doing this, Charpinet and colleagues
noticed a characteristic dip in the light coming from KIC 05807616
every 5.76 and 8.23 hours – the result of two objects passing in front
of the star as viewed from Kepler.
What seems remarkable is that the planets were not
completely destroyed in the process of engulfment. But Charpinet said
that the large iron cores of giant planets could resist the environment
for millions of years.
“Iron is certainly much harder to evaporate than the
gaseous or liquid layers made of volatile elements that make the large
envelopes of giant planets,” he explained. “Moreover, the dense cores
are quite tightly bound by their own gravity.”
Then, it will take more time to completely evaporate
them. In fact, our discovery suggests that such cores could survive long
enough throughout the red giant phase and later on around a very hot
star.”
On Tuesday, a separate team announced that they had used Kepler to
detect planets with diameters just 87 per cent and 103 percent of that
of the Earth. These go into the record books as the first true
Earth-size planets found outside our solar system.
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