Newly discovered Jupiter-sized exoplanet might become cosmic 'Rosetta stone'
Thursday - Mar 18, 2010, 04:07pm (GMT+5.5)
Washington, March 18 (ANI): An international team of scientists has reported the discovery of a new planet the size of Jupiter that has a temperate climate, which might turn out to be the Rosetta stone in exoplanet research.
The planet, called CoRoT-9b, was discovered by using the CoRoT space telescope satellite.
The newly discovered planet orbits a star similar to our sun and is located in the constellation Serpens Cauda, at a distance of 1500 light-years from Earth.
"CoRoT-9b is the first transiting extrasolar planet that is definitely similar to a planet in our solar system, namely Jupiter," UCSB postdoctoral fellow Avi Shporer told National Geographic News.
"What is special about this planet is that it transits a star, and it is a temperate planet. It has great potential for future studies concerning its physical characteristics and atmosphere," he added.
"Corot-9b is the first exoplanet that really does resemble planets in our solar system," said lead author Hans Deeg. "It has the size of Jupiter and an orbit similar to that of Mercury," he added.
The planet is mostly made of hydrogen and helium, but may contain up to 20 Earth masses of heavier elements including rock and water under high pressure.
It thus appears to be very similar to the solar system's giant planets, Jupiter and Saturn.
"It may contain up to 20 Earth masses of other elements, including water and rock at high temperatures and pressures," said team member Tristan Guillot.
The planet Corot-9b passes in front of its star every 95 days, as viewed from Earth.
Each of these "transits" lasts about eight hours.
When Corot-9b is positioned between its star and Earth, some of the light from its star passes through the exoplanet's atmosphere before continuing on to our planet.
By studying this filtered starlight, astronomers may be able to determine what molecules make up Corot-9b's atmosphere.
If that's the case, Corot-9b could become a "Rosetta stone" for exoplanet research, according to study co-author Claire Moutou of the Laboratory of Astrophysics of Marseilles in France, referring to the artifact that helped decipher ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics.
"We hope that when we can investigate this planet, it will have characteristics which are close to other giant gas planets outside our solar system," Moutou said.
That's because Corot-9b's physical properties are thought to be representative of many gas giant exoplanets in our galaxy.
So, studying Corot-9b in detail could shed light on worlds that do not transit, and thus are impossible for astronomers to research. (ANI)
| Other Articles: |
 |
Similipal Tiger Reserve faces poaching threat (18th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Scientists urge CITES to reject ivory sale by Tanzania and Zambia (18th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Forest protected areas important for slowing climate change (18th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Porous China-Myanmar border allowing illegal tiger trade (18th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Media usually covers aggressive cancer treatment and survival than death (18th Mar, 2010) |
 |
New improved lentil being readied for market (18th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Mini river delta in lab may help predict the next catastrophic flood (17th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Scientists identify the most promising interstellar candidates for stardust (17th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Semi-tropical frogs help scientists devise foam that removes excess CO2 from air (17th Mar, 2010) |
 |
UV exposure has increased over the last 30 years, reveals satellite data (17th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Scientists make interior weather map of Jupiter's giant storm system (17th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Tropical ants use their legs as rudders to glide to safety from predators (17th Mar, 2010) |
 |
South Africa drafts internet providers to fight trafficking (17th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Why nebulae around massive stars don't disappear (17th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Booster shot 'improves TB resistance in previously vaccinated adults' (17th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Cellular defect that leads to cancer discovered (17th Mar, 2010) |
 |
World's fastest car's lift problem fixed (17th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Crystals of zinc oxide in water can lead to clean hydrogen fuel (17th Mar, 2010) |
 |
UK Govt. adverts that 'exaggerated' Climate change banned (17th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Earth and Venus might be involved in a long-distance relationship (17th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Copenhagen climate summit undone by rich countries 'arrogance': Stern (17th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Tourists putting dolphins at risk in Zanzibar (17th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Ultra-powerful laser makes silicon pump liquid uphill with no added energy (17th Mar, 2010) |
 |
iPhones app that guides medics through heart attack treatment launched (17th Mar, 2010) |
 |
Jaws - 4 million BC! (17th Mar, 2010) |
|