Galaxy's Youngest Exoplanet Offers Insight Into How Planets Form
  • 2 years ago
Galaxy's Youngest , Exoplanet Offers Insight, Into How Planets Form.
'The New York Times' reports that
astronomers have found over 5,000
exoplanets over the past 30 years.
According to a study published in 'The Astrophysical
Journal Letters,' scientists have found compelling
evidence of a world just 1.5 million years old.
That would make it one of
the youngest planets ever found,
if not the youngest. .
The exoplanet is located
395 light-years from Earth
in the constellation Ophiuchus.
According to the team, the planet is so young that its building blocks of gas and dust are still coalescing. .
It is like looking at our own past, Myriam Benisty, co-author and an astronomer at the Institute of Planetology and Astrophysics of Grenoble, via 'The New York Times'.
The 'NYT' reports that further telescopic
observations will be needed in order
to confirm the exoplanet's existence.
The 'NYT' reports that further telescopic
observations will be needed in order
to confirm the exoplanet's existence.
If confirmed, the exoplanet could
be used to better understand
how worlds are formed.
The team of scientists used the Atacama
Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA)
to gather data on the exoplanet. .
The 'NYT' reports that the James Webb Telescope will
next be used to determine the mass of the planetary
newborn and analyze its atmospheric chemistry.
The 'NYT' reports that the James Webb Telescope will
next be used to determine the mass of the planetary
newborn and analyze its atmospheric chemistry.
Jaehan Bae, an astronomer at the University of Florida
and an author of the study, said the observation
will inch us closer to answering the question: , "Where did we come from?"
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