NASA's
Spitzer detects light of alien 'Super-Earth'
By Indo
Asian News Service
From
Washington (IANS) NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope has detected
light emanating from a "super-Earth" planet beyond our
solar system for the first time.
"Spitzer
has amazed us yet again," said Bill Danchi, Spitzer program scientist
at NASA Headquarters here. "The spacecraft is pioneering the
study of atmospheres of distant planets and paving the way for NASA's upcoming
James Webb Space Telescope to apply a similar technique on potentially
habitable planets."
The
planet, called 55 Cancri e, falls into a class of planets termed
super Earths, which are more massive than our home world but lighter than giant
planets like Neptune. The planet is about twice as big and eight times as
massive as Earth. It orbits a bright star, called55 Cancri, in a mere 18 hours,
according to a NASA statement.
Previously,
Spitzer and other telescopes were able to study the planet by analyzing how the
light from 55 Cancri changed as the planet passed in front of the star. In the
new study, Spitzer measured how much infrared light comes from the planet
itself.
The
results reveal the planet is likely dark, and its sun-facing side is more than
2,000 Kelvin (3,140 degrees Fahrenheit), hot enough to melt metal. The new
information is consistent with a prior theory that 55 Cancri e is a water
world: a rocky core surrounded by a layer of water in a
"supercritical" state where it is both liquid and gas, and topped by
a blanket of steam.
"It
could be very similar to Neptune, if you pulled Neptune in toward our sun and
watched its atmosphere boil away," said Michael Gillon of Universite de
Liege in Belgium, principal investigator of the research, which appears in the
Astrophysical Journal. Brice-Olivier Demory of theMassachusetts Institute of
Technology, Cambridge, led the study.
The 55
Cancri system is relatively close to Earth, at 41 light-years away. It has five
planets, with 55 Cancri e the closest to the star and tidally locked, so one
side always faces the star. Spitzer discovered the sun-facing side is extremely
hot, indicating the planet probably does not have a substantial atmosphere to
carry the sun's heat to the unlit side.
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