First Image Of Planet-Like Body Orbiting A Star
deglr6328 writes "The Gemini North Telescope has, for the first time, directly imaged a planet like body orbiting a star. The object is a brown dwarf, 55 to 78 times the mass of planet Jupiter and 14 AU distant from its parent star 15 Sge. It was imaged using adaptive optics(see also here) that correct for the blurring effect of the atmosphere using deformable mirrors. Cool!"
"It was imaged using adaptive optics(see also here) that correct for the blurring effect of the atmospher"
so they drew it in, right? i can do that too! look, planets!
the wonders of gimp.
(before you flame me about adaptive optics...don't.)
Would we even be here?
Considering the climactic history of Earth, it's clear that even small perturbations in its orbit and small changes in the brightness of the Sun have large effects on the climate. In a binary star system, its not at all clear that any planetary climates would ever be steady enough to allow higher life forms to develop. Neither the orbit nor the energy received from the suns would likely be stable enough.
And the brethren went away edified.
A brown dwarf, especially one that much larger than jupiter is not a planet, but is a star.
So this isn't a planet orbiting a star, but would better be described as two starts orbiting each other, much like Alpha Centauri proxima (the dwarf one)
Now that god has apparently failed him he is probably off learning how to be a satanist. (typical extremist behaviour)
--jeff
ipv6 is my vpn
Until we see it moving around that other star in an ellipse, it's just some bright pixels next to some other bright pixels. Hopefully, in a few months, we'll get to see some relative motion from it.
The big deal is that this is the first time they've directly observed something this size orbiting so far from a star, it challanges the theories of solar system formation. I may be wrong, but I don't think we've observed (directly or indirectly) anything close planet sized that is more than a few AU from it's parent star.