Hubble Discovers an Evaporating Planet
Licensed2Hack writes "For the first time, astronomers using NASA's Hubble Space Telescope have observed the atmosphere of an extrasolar planet evaporating off into space. Much of the planet may eventually disappear, leaving only a dense core. The planet is a type of extrasolar planet known as a "hot Jupiter."
Spaceflightnow and Nature have the details."
What's all the fuss about? That's what you'd expect when a planet is too close and the star reaches the red giant phase.
Repeal the DMCA!
Gulp! Would someone please define "much lower" so I can sleep again?
"I think all foreigners should stop interfering in the internal affairs of Iraq"
-- Paul Wolfowitz, 7/21/2003
May I recommend core-so-soft lotion? Guaranteed to bring revitilizing atmosphere and vitaman E to itchy and dry celestial bodies.
"I only speak the truth"
Karma: null(Mostly affected by an unassigned variable)
The star in NOT in a red giant phase - it's still on the Main Sequence for dwarf stars, and is very similiar to our Sun.
;)
The point is that you can't form a large gas giant so close to a star, it must have formed a long distance out and then 'migrated' to its present position near the star. How that happened will keep astro theorists in grants for a long time
Also, the size of this gas giant has been noted to be much larger than theoretical models predict, suggesting it is being heated up by the proximity of the parent star - this 'boiling off' of the atmosphere confirms this interpretation.
Dr Fish
Is that a two mile wide ex-planetary core diamond in your pocket, or are you just pleased to see me?