Saturday, 7 March 2015

Astronomers Find Massive Exoplanet With Four Parent Stars






30 Ari
Artist rendering of the system 30 Ari with its exoplanet and four

stars.



Excerpt from techtimes.com 
By Dianne Depra
 
Researchers seeking to study the complexities of exoplanets with

multiple stars have found a new system with four. Called 30 Ari, the

system has been discovered earlier actually but at the time it was

thought to only have three parent stars.




The truth about 30 Ari was realized with help from instruments

installed on telescopes at San Diego’s Palomar Observatory, detailed in a

study published in the Astronomical Journal. These instruments include

the PALM-3000 and the Robo-AO adaptive optics systems by NASA’s Jet

Propulsion Laboratory and Caltech and the California Institute of

Technology and the Inter-University Center for Astronomy and

Astrophysics, respectively. The only other four-star exoplanet on record

is the KIC 4862625 discovered in 2013.




The discovery of 30 Ari hints at the possibility that four-star

planets might not be as rare as previously believed. In fact, research

has shown that the four-star systems these planets are in are also more

common than thought of before. According to Andrei Tokovinin from the

Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory and one of the co-authors for

the study, around 4 percent of solar stars are found in quadruple

systems.




The four-star system 30 Ari is situated 136 light-years away in the

Aries constellation. It features a massive gaseous planet 10 times

Jupiter’s mass orbiting its primary star every 335 days. This primary

star has a partner star close by but the exoplanet does not orbit the

partner. The primary star and its pair are in turn locked in

long-distance orbit with another star pair some 1,670 astronomical units

away. One astronomical unit is equivalent to the distance between the

sun and the Earth.




If one were to stand on 30 Ari’s exoplanet and look up at the sky,

the parent stars will look like a small sun flanked by two bright stars

visible during daylight.




In recent years, exoplanets with two or three stars as parents have

been discovered, including some with Tatooine-like sunsets. The fact

that a lot of binary stars exist in the galaxy makes it unsurprising

that so many exoplanets are being discovered with multiple parent stars.




“It’s amazing the way nature puts these things together,” said Lewis Roberts from JPL, the lead author for the study.



The researchers want to further understand how having several parent

stars can affect a developing exoplanet. Evidence from previous research

suggests that accompanying stars can have an effect on exoplanets by

changing planetary orbits or triggering further growth for the planet.




Source Article from http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/AscensionEarth2012/~3/ObAqGV5NW_M/astronomers-find-massive-exoplanet-with.html



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