Baby Planet Clears Gap in Young Protoplanetary Disk
The newborn planet WISPIT 2b is eating its way through its dusty cradle as it orbits its host star. The above image, taken with ESO’s Very Large Telescope in Chile, is the first clear detection of a baby planet in a disc with multiple rings. Credit:ESO / R. F. van Capelleveen et al.
For the first time ever, an international team of astronomers led by PhD student Richelle van Capelleveen (Leiden Observatory, The Netherlands) has directly imaged a baby planet orbiting in the gap it has itself cleared within the huge, multi-ringed protoplanetary disk of a young star. The 5-million-year-old star, TYC 5709-354-1, is 430 light-years away, in the outskirts of the Scorpius-Centaur association.
Astronomers have long theorized that newborn planets sweep out concentric gaps observed in many circumstellar disks. In 2018, astronomers detected a planet in the relatively empty central region of the disk of the young star PDS 70, but the new discovery is “the first detection of an embedded planet in a cleared gap,” according to van Capelleveen’s supervisor Matthew Kenworthy.
Multiple images obtained by the SPHERE instrument on the European Southern Observatory’s 8.2-meter Very Large Telescope in Chile, carried out over a period of 18 months, reveal the orbital motion of the planet, which is about five times as massive as Jupiter, the team reports in The Astrophysical Journal Letters.
A companion paper, by Laird Close (University of Arizona) and colleagues, describes observations with the 6.5-meter Magellan Telescope, also in Chile, that reveal hydrogen gas still accreting on the planet. “As soon as we took a picture, in the light of H-alpha [dark red light emitted by ionized hydrogen, GS], we found a beautiful accreting planet,” says Close in a press statement. “Our strong H-alpha detection proves it is a very rare example of a growing protoplanet.”
(Source: skyandtelescope.org)
