In a wild turn of cosmic events, a group of astronomers is trying to reclaim the role of having made the first photograph of a planet around another star.
They may have to wait for history to award the blue ribbon, however, since
the hunt for planet-like objects is turning out to be easier than developing
a classification
system for the variable types of orbs being found.
The saga goes back to last September, when SPACE.com broke the news that a team based at the European Southern Observatory (ESO) had made what they said was likely the first picture of an extrasolar planet. That object, 2M1207b, appeared bound to a young but failed star known as a brown dwarf sitting about 200 light-years from Earth.
But it was also possible that 2M1207b was instead a distant background object. More observations were needed to make sure the object was indeed orbiting the brown dwarf star.
The competition
Meanwhile, earlier this month, Ralph Neuhaeuser of the Astrophysical Institute & University Observatory said his team had made the first confirmed picture of a planet around another star called GQ Lupi, some 400 light-years away. In this case, also first reported by SPACE.com, the object was observed to be clearly bound to the star.
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The
Contenders
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GQ
Lupi
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LIKELY
MASS
2 times Jupiter
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ODDITY
Slight chance it's 42 times Jupiter's mass
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IMAGE
PUBLISHED
April 1, 2005
STORY
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2M1207b
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LIKELY
MASS
5 times Jupiter
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ODDITY
Orbits failed star
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IMAGE
PUBLISHED
Sept. 10, 2004
STORY
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Importantly, GQ Lupi is similar to our Sun, rather than being a dim brown dwarf
star that emits virtually no visible light.
But again there was a hitch: While observations suggest the planet orbiting
GQ Lupi is about twice as massive as Jupiter, there is a slight chance it is
42 times the mass of Jupiter - so heavy that it would be considered a brown
dwarf. The outlying models, however, are very unlikely to apply to the system,
some astronomers said.
"Based on what we know, that image is an image of an object much like Jupiter
at an extremely young age," said Ben Oppenheimer of the American Museum of Natural
History, who was not involved in either study.
Both claims were appropriately modest, in the sense that the researchers admitted
more observations were needed to confirm their apparent discoveries.
Back in this corner ...
Today, the ESO team announced new observations of 2M1207b that show convincingly,
they say, that their target is indeed a planet. If so, it could be remembered
as the first picture of an exoplanet, since the team had already released the
initial image last fall.
"Our new images show convincingly that this really is a planet, the first planet
that has ever been imaged outside of our solar system," said team leader Gael
Chauvin, an ESO astronomer.
"The two objects -- the giant planet and the young brown dwarf -- are moving
together; we have observed them for a year, and the new images essentially confirm
our 2004 finding," says Benjamin Zuckerman, another ESO team member from
UCLA. "I'm more than 99 percent confident."
The object's mass is based on both observations and assumptions about they
system based on its age, which is about 5 million years (our solar system, by
comparison, is 4.5 billion years old). Leading theory suggests 2M1207b is between
three and seven times the heft of Jupiter -- well within the limits of planethood.
What is a planet?
The whole issue is further clouded by the fact that 2M1207b orbits a brown
dwarf rather than a regular star. Brown dwarfs stars do not have enough mass
to trigger the thermonuclear fusion that powers a regular star. So a planetary-mass
object around them exists in an unusual system that is unlikely to have any
chance of harboring life as we know it. It also may have had a different formation
history.
"Given the rather unusual properties of the 2M1207 system, the giant planet
most probably did not form like the planets in our solar system," Chauvin
said. "Instead it must have formed the same way our Sun formed, by a one-step
gravitational collapse of a cloud of gas and dust."
Alan Boss, a planet formation theorist at the Carnegie Institution of Washington,
said both findings represent "great stuff" but he's not ready to draw firm conclusions
about who wins.
"This object [2M1207b] should be termed a sub-brown-dwarf (star), in order
to convey this suspicion about its formation mechanism," Boss said in an e-mail
interview. "A number of sub-brown dwarfs have been observed as single objects
in regions of recent star formation, but 2M1207 would seem to be the first one
in orbit around a brown dwarf (star). All in all it is an excellent discovery
of a new class of object, but it is unclear if this object should be termed
a 'planet.'"
Boss is careful to note that this is his opinion, however. There is no agreement
among astronomers on the definition of the term "planet." A spirited
debate dates back to attempts
to define the word five years ago.
"I consider it as a planet, regardless whether it formed differently than Jupiter
- and regardless it's orbiting a failed star instead of solar-type star," says
Christophe Dumas, a colleague of Chauvin. "Actually, this discovery is even
more interesting due to the fact that the brown dwarf and the giant planet are
not forming a 'traditional' system as we know it from looking at our own solar
system. We did not expect to find a giant planet in orbit around a brown dwarf
and it's there."
For now, the International Astronomical Union lists 2M1207b as a "possible
planetary-mass companion to a brown dwarf. It catalogues the GQ Lupi discovery
as "a possible planetary-mass companion to a young star."
The ultimate challenge
Someday history will sort out a winner. Meanwhile, there are more challenges
for planet hunters to tackle.
More than 140 planets have been found around other stars. Most are very massive
and have been detected by noting the gravity wobble they induce on their stars.
Photographing planets around other stars is difficult because the starlight
so greatly overpowers any light coming from a planet.
The tricks used to tease the two present contenders out of their respective
glares surprised the whole astronomy community.
Scientists expect to eventually photograph obvious planets around normal stars,
and even Earth-sized planets when technology allows. Those images will likely
come from space-based observatories that are now only in the planning stages.
"We're collecting here the first piece of a puzzle that will lead - within
the next decade - to define a big picture of planetary systems," Dumas said
via e-mail. "Some will be like our own, but most of them probably not. Some
planets will be orbiting close to giant stars and will not be in a position
to sustain life. Others will be orbiting far away from much less massive stars
like in the 2M1207 system. Others will be Earth-like and will orbit at the right
distance from the star to produce the right conditions, so life as we know it
could emerge."
The paper describing the 2M1207 observations has been accepted for publication
in the journal Astronomy and Astrophysics.
For the record, there was a third player in all this. A Hubble Space Telescope photograph reported by SPACE.com in May 2004 was also said to be a candidate planet. That object, a much more tentative detection than the two recent cases, was later found to be a background object, showing how difficult this quest has been.