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First Image of a Planet Orbiting a Sun-Like Star

Several readers including houbou and DigitumDei sent links to what may be the first-ever image of a planet orbiting a sun-like star (research paper). The giant planet, the mass of 8 Jupiters, orbits its star at 330 AU, or 11 times the distance to Neptune's orbit. If the imaged object does turn out to be a planet — and it's not certain it is — then theories of planet formation may have to be adjusted. "The bulk of the material from which planets might form is significantly closer to the parent star... The outermost parts of such disks wouldn't contain enough material to assemble a Jupiter-mass planet at the distance from the star... at which the Toronto team found the faint object."

131 comments

  1. ARGH! by Tumbleweed · · Score: 5, Funny

    Damn you, Google Star View! There IS such a thing as privacy, you know!

    1. Re:ARGH! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      Google has no problem with protecting a star's privacy as long as they file out a request. Google has already sent out a message discussing their privacy policy. Considering that this star is 472 light years away, Google might have to update their system in about 944 years.

    2. Re:ARGH! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      "What do you mean you've never been to Alfa Centauri? Oh, for heavens sake mankind, it's only four light years away. I'm sorry but if you can't bother to take an interest in local affairs then ..." HHGG

    3. Re:ARGH! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Just in case the article will be slashdotted, here's the image:
      Planet ----> . O <---- Star

    4. Re:ARGH! by aliquis · · Score: 2, Funny

      Yeah, but what is more worrying if a planet can't be made at this distance it must either be the Vogons or the Borgs, and in either case we're fucked.

  2. Where's the orbit? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    ...and yet where's the second pic to prove that it orbits?

    1. Re:Where's the orbit? by StarManta.Mini · · Score: 1

      At that distance, its year would be many hundreds of years long. It'll take a long time to see any change in position visually.

    2. Re:Where's the orbit? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Yes, assuming the object is orbiting the star, and using some quick and very dirty calculations based on information in the article, it has an orbital period of between 6 and 7 thousand years. Even if we were viewing at a right angle to its orbital trajectory it would take years to see it move at all and many more to determine its orbit with any certainty.

    3. Re:Where's the orbit? by Geirzinho · · Score: 2

      They are open to that idea. From the article:

      [...] there's a small chance that the object, small enough to be classified as a planet, merely resides in the same part of the sky as the star but is not gravitationally bound to it.

    4. Re:Where's the orbit? by lucason · · Score: 1

      ...and yet where's the second pic to prove that it orbits?

      How could a second pic prove that?

  3. Looks like a smudge by InvisblePinkUnicorn · · Score: 0

    "Oh! Oh! What is that?! What is that?!!? A new planet?!!

    Nope. Cheetoh."

  4. Don't worry, we won't have to revise any theories by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    The Toronto people are just confused as to why the planet isn't orbiting around them.

  5. Low-bandwidth version in case of slashdotting by PeeAitchPee · · Score: 5, Funny

    O .

    1. Re:Low-bandwidth version in case of slashdotting by jaxtherat · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      BEST. ASCII. ART. EVER.

      --
      http://www.zombieapocalypse.tv/
    2. Re:Low-bandwidth version in case of slashdotting by barwasp · · Score: 1

      More photo-realistic low-bandwidth images of the above are available on any CD-disk's bottom-side. Just touch the screen with that CD. Blinking your eyes while doing that converts it into a slideshow.

    3. Re:Low-bandwidth version in case of slashdotting by Kligat · · Score: 1

      If the Earth were as big as your arm, the Moon would be twenty feet away. Unfortunately, there isn't enough room for that much space on your computer screen.

    4. Re:Low-bandwidth version in case of slashdotting by jobst · · Score: 1

      or this :-O

      in case the theory goes Bang (big bang, big bada bum).

      --
      to code or not to code, that is the question.
  6. we'd better hope... by commodoresloat · · Score: 3, Funny

    If the imaged object does turn out to be a planet â" and it's not certain it is â" then theories of planet formation may have to be adjusted.

    Whereas if this thing that is bigger than 8 Jupiters turns out to be something other than a planet, we may have some other theories to adjust. But I, for one, welcome our giant space traveling overlords!

    1. Re:we'd better hope... by prod-you · · Score: 1

      I dunno, I couldn't see any legs dangling off it to be certain it was an Overlord. Perhaps it's just the Queen.

    2. Re:we'd better hope... by Orion+Blastar · · Score: 1

      The Astronomical term is a Super Jupiter, which describes a gas giant of four times or larger than Jupiter in our solar system.

      A Jupiter sized planet or larger that is under 1 AU orbit from it's star is called a Hot Jupiter, because it will be heated up from it's star's heat.

      Astronomers like Carl Sagan came up with those terms, including billions and billions and billions ever before McDonalds copyrighted that term to describe the number of people that get fat or unhealthy from eating at their fast food joints so Carl Sagan came up with a word called Google and Googleplex that popular web search engines stole and squatted on those domain names before Carl Sagan could register them.

      --
      Remember, Slashdot does not have a -1 disagree moderation, and no, troll, flamebait, and overrated are not substitutes.
    3. Re:we'd better hope... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IF Overlords could fly through space, than why don't zerg players just send them all up there so that we can't attack them with our puny battle cruisers.

      Come to think of it, why can't battle cruisers fly through space? stupid game.

    4. Re:we'd better hope... by Urkki · · Score: 1

      Both of these could fly to space of course, but the take off and accelerating to orbital speed would mean that in the context of a single game session, it'd be same as losing the unit. So, to simulate this, just disband the unit (there was disband in Starcraft, wasn't there?).

    5. Re:we'd better hope... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      this just screams for a Chuck Norris/Bruce Schneier meme-a-like...

      "Carl Sagan counts to a googleplex a google times before breakfast."

      "Ever wonder why all the aliens speak English when they first get to Earth? Carl Sagan taught them by whispering into Arecibo."

    6. Re:we'd better hope... by Lord+Apathy · · Score: 1

      And yet, I think I can say this with certainty, Carl Sagan really doesn't care about those domain names.

      --

      Supporting World Peace Through Nuclear Pacification

    7. Re:we'd better hope... by Orion+Blastar · · Score: 1

      Thanks mate, I'll add them to the article.

      --
      Remember, Slashdot does not have a -1 disagree moderation, and no, troll, flamebait, and overrated are not substitutes.
    8. Re:we'd better hope... by khellendros1984 · · Score: 1

      Carl Sagan came up with the term "googel". Google's name is a misspelled joke.

      --
      It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.
  7. Old news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    I've seen plenty of pictures of Earth.

    1. Re:Old news... by Timothy+Brownawell · · Score: 3, Funny

      But everyone knows that the Sun and the planets orbit the earth.

    2. Re:Old news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      You're one of Gov. Palin's kids, aren't you?

    3. Re:Old news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that's Vice Prez Elect to you, short stuff.

  8. Theories of planet formation may have to be adjust by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I suspect that will be the case for many many decades/centuries, considering a current sample size of 9 +/- planets big enough to wobble their stars enough that we can see with current tech.

    I suspect the more we resolve and catalog and the more we get direct observations of planets, the more the theories will change.

  9. First? by TopSpin · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This is no longer the "first" directly observed extrasolar planet? What value of "first" is are we using now?

    --
    Lurking at the bottom of the gravity well, getting old
    1. Re:First? by Timothy+Brownawell · · Score: 5, Informative

      Perhaps it's that that star isn't "sun-like"?

    2. Re:First? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is no longer the "first" directly observed extrasolar planet? What value of "first" is are we using now?

      2M1207 is a brown dwarf. We have observed other planetary-mass objects orbiting brown dwarfs, but this news story is about the first one orbiting a roughly sun-sized star.

    3. Re:First? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're right, it isn't. The star in the gp's post is a brown drawf, which does not sustain nuclear fusion of hydrogen. To be accurate, the star in the article is a pre-main sequence star and doesn't primarily depend on the burning of such fusion either.

    4. Re:First? by Trogre · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Okay but what about "Blue marble"? That predates this effort, and clearly shows a planet which is known to orbit a sun-like star.

      --
      "Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
    5. Re:First? by BitZtream · · Score: 1

      I'm no expert, in fact I don't follow this stuff closely at all, but it was my understanding that everytime they find a 'planet orbiting another star' it turns out not to actually be a planet. At least everyone I've seen turns out that way after a little while.

      Since you reference a wikipedia article, I can only assume that if I am correct, the article is wrong, like many wikipedia entries. However I fully accept that I may be wrong as most of the higher profile wikipedia entries are fairly accurate, which I would expect this one to be.

      Just throwing out a possiblity, as I said, I really have no clue.

      --
      Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
    6. Re:First? by dreamchaser · · Score: 2, Informative

      Nope. There have been a few false positives, but there have been plenty of 'confirmed' sightings of extra-solar planets.

  10. Re:Theories of planet formation may have to be adj by exp(pi*sqrt(163)) · · Score: 0

    I suspect the more we resolve and catalog and the more we get direct observations of planets, the more the theories will change.

    Do you really think so? I wonder if that principle applies to other things too. Like if astronomers keep observing galaxies then theories of galaxy formation will evolve too.

    --
    Doesn't it make you feel good to know that our freedoms are protected by politicans, lawyers and journalists.
  11. Obligatory by stonecypher · · Score: 2, Funny

    ... that's no moon ...

    --
    StoneCypher is Full of BS
    1. Re:Obligatory by CorporateSuit · · Score: 5, Informative

      ... that's no moon ...

      We've already established that. It's a planet.

      --
      I am the richest astronaut ever to win the superbowl.
    2. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Star Wars reference folks. *Woosh*

    3. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      I find your lack of original conversation disturbing...
      http://xkcd.com/307/

    4. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a SPACE STATION.

    5. Re:Obligatory by extrasolar · · Score: 1

      Well, maybe. They'll probably come up with some other bogus classification like mega planet or inert star or something.

    6. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's right, it's a fricking Death Star.
      (You missed the Star Wars joke there, but somehow got modded up as Insightful).

    7. Re:Obligatory by Fluffeh · · Score: 0, Redundant

      ... that's no moon ...

      We've already established that. It's a planet.

      And I think you just established that you totally missed the reference in the original post. Go back watch some of your (hopefully) older DVDs and see if you get the reference :)

      --
      Moved to http://soylentnews.org/. You are invited to join us too!
    8. Re:Obligatory by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1
      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    9. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      whoooooooooshhhh...

    10. Re:Obligatory by bazorg · · Score: 1

      that's what they promised to the Plutonians :(

    11. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Star Wars DVD's can't really be considered "old" can they?

    12. Re:Obligatory by JamesP · · Score: 1

      We've already established that. It's a planet.

      Tell that to Pluto, your insensitive clod!!!

      --
      how long until /. fixes commenting on Chrome?
    13. Re:Obligatory by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

      Star Wars reference folks. *Woosh*

      I hereby rename that franchise "No-Moon Wars".

      --

      Lars T.

      To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

    14. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's no planet. That's a Dairy Queen.

  12. Re:Don't worry, we won't have to revise any theori by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    One can forgive the town that produced Rush for being a trifle arrogant.

  13. Too big to be a planet? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wait, what is it called when something is too *big* to be a planet?

    1. Re:Too big to be a planet? by 4D6963 · · Score: 1

      A brown dwarf. Why do you say it like it should be obvious?

      --
      You just got troll'd!
    2. Re:Too big to be a planet? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      umm... IMO it should be called dwarfoid.

    3. Re:Too big to be a planet? by shadwstalkr · · Score: 1

      Wait, what is it called when something is too *big* to be a planet?

      Rush Limbaugh. Har har.

  14. Gemini Telescope and guide stars by wigaloo · · Score: 5, Informative

    The discovery was made using the 8m diameter Gemini Telescope - North on Mauna Kea. It's doesn't have Hubble's advantage of being in space, and so a clever approach is employed to eliminate interference from atmospheric turbulence. A laser is used to induce fluorescence in the sodium layer left by meteors up around 80 km altitude. -- this is called a "guide star" -- and adaptive (i.e., deformable) optics in the telescope bring the guide star image into sharp focus, and the rest of the scene with it. A guide star is used for this process rather than an actual star because it is much easier to adaptively image a bright object (which can also be positioned where needed). Such a clear image would otherwise not have been possible.

    1. Re:Gemini Telescope and guide stars by Shag · · Score: 5, Informative

      Just to flesh this out and offer a few corrections, as someone who works around the AO LGS at Gemini (and Keck):

      Tomduck is correct that an adaptive optics (AO) system uses deformable optics to bring a guide star into sharp focus, and the rest of the scene with it. He fails to mention that this process is in no way inherently dependent upon the use of a laser. Indeed, when a bright natural star is close enough to the target to be used, it is in many ways preferable to using the laser. (For one, the brightness of natural stars tends to be pretty constant, and not subject to the usual game of "so, how many watts shy of nominal power are we tonight?" :) So Gemini's AO system, Altair (read all about it here) is quite often used with natural guide stars (NGS).

      A NGS can, incidentally, also be used for guiding - keeping the telescope pointed correctly - as its name implies. This isn't the case for a laser guide star (LGS), which in fact has absolutely no use for pointing, since the laser is fastened to, and aligned with, the telescope. It's a horrible misnomer. :( LGS come into play because the field of view of large (8-10m) telescopes is narrow enough that NGS are frequently not visible at the same time as science targets.

      There are three large telescopes on Mauna Kea with LGS capabilities - Keck II has an older-technology sodium dye laser (pumped/amped by about six YAGs), Gemini has a solid-state (crystal) laser, and I'm not certain what Subaru has as I haven't worked with them yet. The W.M. Keck Observatory has funding to put a laser on Keck I also, but I'm unsure when it'll be operational. All of the lasers propagate at around 589nm for sodium fluorescence (this is coincidentally about the same frequency put out by the low-pressure sodium streetlights used in the towns on the island, so astronomers can pretty much ignore this frequency).

      Each beam is about 8-12W with an objective lens diameter of typically 30-50cm, spreading a little as it goes up. Not enough power to punch holes in stuff, but enough that the FAA requires aircraft spotters to be positioned outside each observatory to make sure they don't blind the pilots of flights between the west coast and Australia/New Zealand. I've done this work sporadically since 2005 at Keck and 2006 at Gemini, so I have tons of pictures and time-lapse video... here's one of the Gemini beam with me ruining the picture by sitting in front of it.

      Along with the FAA, AFSC (that's Air Force Space Command, not the American Friends Service Committee) is rather particular about us not shining the bright lights into the sensitive sensors of keyholes and such things. We look up, they look down, etc.

      By the way, if there are any Farkers on the Big Island of Hawaii who think this kind of work sounds like fun, it looks like Keck has openings. It's temp-agency work, and probably the coldest, highest-altitude temp-agency work you'll ever get...

      --
      Village idiot in some extremely smart villages.
    2. Re:Gemini Telescope and guide stars by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, you work on top of a high mountain, on a tropical island, with huge telescopes, with frikin' lasers on their heads? Does Dr. Evil work with you?

  15. Something to keep in mind by QuantumG · · Score: 1

    If you're of the opinion that we'll only find "life as we know it" on an Earth-like planet orbiting a Sun-like star in the habitable zone, then we haven't really got any data on how common their configuration is, so its a complete mystery how many civilizations like ours there are out there. Of course, if you're of the opinion that "as we know it" really isn't that important, then that's not entirely relevant.

    Oh, and here's my exoplanet rant that I post every time one of these stories hits Slashdot.

    --
    How we know is more important than what we know.
    1. Re:Something to keep in mind by Teancum · · Score: 1

      As far as a truly "Earth-like" rocky planet being discovered around a star of spectral classes between F & M type stars, I think it may be a bit longer than 2012 before that can happen.

      Mind you, telescope precision and monitoring Doppler variations in radial velocities of stars are improving significantly (where most of these "discoveries" are happening), it would take some very hard precision instruments to be able to detect an "Earth-like" mass object. Smaller planets thus far identified are still at least an order of magnitude larger than the Earth.

      We'll see, but predictions like this are hard to make without understanding the technology and knowings its limits. Research of this nature may give rise to some interesting candidates for inter-stellar space probes of the future, but I don't think that is going to happen within my lifetime.

  16. Planetary Science by Teancum · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If the imaged object does turn out to be a planet â" and it's not certain it is â" then theories of planet formation may have to be adjusted

    Since all of the current theories about planetary formation around stellar objects consist of a statistical sample of one, I'd like to hope that Astro-physicists would be able to come up with some better theories when that sample size is increased.

    One thing we do know from stellar observations is that binary or multiple star systems are much more common than solitary stellar systems like we have here around Sol. Even from observation of stellar nurseries it is also apparent that the physical structures that give rise to stars are born in highly complex environments of which our Solar System was likely a rather bland or even "ideal laboratory" example of how planetary systems were created.

    Given the distance (330 AU... about 1/10th the same distance as between the Sun and Neptune) and if I were "betting" on what would be found with a planetary probe going to this star system, I think you would find nearly a complete planetary system around this gas giant as well, with this "planet" simply being in the Continuum between O-class blue giant stars and grains of sand.

    Of course this observation of discovering a secondary system is based upon a sample size of 4 gas giants in our own solar system that all seem to have their own satellite systems as well. That is more like shooting fish in a barrel to make this sort of prediction.

    Seriously, other than a highly simplistic planetary creation model, I fail to see what huge changes in formation theory this will actually make, other than to give more pause to think about how complex the stellar formation process might be.

    1. Re:Planetary Science by JackCroww · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Maybe you made a typo, but Neptune orbits at roughly 30 AU from Sol, making Neptune at 1/10th the distance of the exo-planet in the article. Hence the question of WTF is it doing out so far from its primary? However, if it wasn't a typo on your part, you need to bone up on your basic Solar system facts, and your theory about it being a typical planetary system would be dead wrong.

      --
      "Ayn Rand is a bloody socialist compared to me." - Robert A. Heinlein
    2. Re:Planetary Science by Teancum · · Score: 2, Informative

      I meant that Neptune was 1/10th the distance as this object. Yeah, I screwed up here. Thanks for pointing that out.

    3. Re:Planetary Science by JaimeZX · · Score: 3, Interesting

      There was an excellent article in a recent issue of Scientific American that discussed updated theories of planet formation based on not only our solar system, but observations of other systems as well.

      The short version, IIRC goes something like this:

      * Star forms. The remaining disk around the star consists mainly of grains of dust, which slowly clump together under their own gravity.

      * As clumps get bigger, they create a gravitational "wake" of particulates in the vicinity of their orbit. The wake closer to the star orbits faster and therefore its mass provides a "forward pull" on the object, whereas the part of the wake farther out orbits more slowly and provides a "rearward pull" on the object. The disk gets bigger as you go out (geometry!) and therefore there is more material in the outer half of the "wake," so the "rearward pull" is stronger than the foreward pull. This slows the object slightly and causes it to spiral inward towards the star.

      * At a certain distance from the star (the "snow line") water ice converts to water vapor and the "rearward pull" on our orbiting object goes away. (I'm still not clear on why this is the case, BTW.) So inward-spiraling objects tend to stop at the snow line, and this is where a gas giant planet is most likely to form.

      * Jupiter's wake at the snow line leads to the formation of Saturn as Jupiter's large mass starts throwing nearby things into a higher orbit.

      * "Ice giants" like Neptune and Uranus can't grow as big as Jupiter because their local environment is depleted as they formed later than Jupiter & Saturn and mostly benefitted from more throw-offs by Saturn.

      So to see an 8-Jupiter-mass gas giant orbiting 330AU from a sunlike star seems extremely unusual and it ought to imply that it was ejected into a higher orbit by something else because there's no reason for it to form there.

      Again, IANAastrophysicist or planetary scientist, but I really get off on this stuff. ;)

    4. Re:Planetary Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you misinterpreted what they are saying. Neptune is about 30 AU from the sun. This "planet" is 330 AU in projected distance from the parent star. Most circumstellar disks around young stars are about 200 AU in radius and there is very little mass at large radii, much less than needed to form this object. So, if this object did indeed form from the disk at a radius of 330 AU it's hard to interpret this in the current theoretical framework.

      It should also be noted that their derived mass is 0.008 +0.004/-0.001 solar masses. These are 1 sigma errors, so there is still a 33% chance that the true mass could lie outside these errors.
      Plus, the brown dwarf/planet limit is roughly drawn at 0.013 solar masses, the deuterium burning limit. In my opinion, this is probably just another brown dwarf.

      Also, the mass of this object is in no way measured, it is inferred from the observed spectrum, and bye my eye, the spectral type seems to be somewhat earlier (higher mass) that they are claiming.

      On a more political note, the second author on the paper Ray Jayawardhana has a history of overstating scientific results for the purpose of getting press release. He doesn't make false claims, merely overstates the importance.

    5. Re:Planetary Science by Kjella · · Score: 1

      Since all of the current theories about planetary formation around stellar objects consist of a statistical sample of one, I'd like to hope that Astro-physicists would be able to come up with some better theories when that sample size is increased.

      With enough detail and enough volume to have from all stages of the formation perhaps, but since we understand gravity quite well I think simulation is the key here. Observation will tell you something about the realm of possible planets, but I think it would take us a very long time to get accurate models based off observation.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    6. Re:Planetary Science by thePig · · Score: 1

      Can it just be that due to the gravitational pull of some other system (say another star which went past close enough) pulled the planet out?

      --
      rajmohan_h@yahoo.com
    7. Re:Planetary Science by Teancum · · Score: 1

      What we don't know here are the starting conditions that exist within a "typical" stellar nursery, or even what variables there might be in terms of typical stellar systems for metal-rich gaseous clouds (of the kind that create rocky planets like the Earth).

      Yeah, we have a pretty good understanding of gravity and even enhanced understanding of subtle variations caused by Relativity thanks to Einstein (something often missing from simulations due to complexity of the calculations), but it is these additional variables that are the huge unknowns.

      I dare say that until we have additional observational information here, we can't even come up with a good idea of what these variables might even be in the first place.... although I think it may be possible to come up with a theory that can explain some of these variables and assess their relative importance in terms of what we ultimately see in terms of star formation and their planetary systems.

      Just off the top of my head, here are some variables to consider:

      • Gas cloud density - just how much "stuff" was in the cloud when the planetary system was being formed?
      • Temperature - How hot was the cloud when the star/planets were being formed?
      • Stellar density - How many stars that were formed earlier (perhaps from other gas clouds even) are "near" the nursery when the star was being formed and what was their geometric configuration?

      I'm sure other variables could be considered as well, and all of these could have a profound impact on planetary system formation. My point is that we are missing information right now to even create a viable model beyond the most simplistic examples that explain just our own little solar system.

    8. Re:Planetary Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are correct about Neptune, correcting the prior poster.

      I agree however that we may find a Jupiter-like system surrounding the "planet" at 330 AU. It might even be fair to say that some of the items circling it would be earthy in nature. Earthiness?

      I suspect this is a captured object of some sort. Most of the stars in that region are recent - leftovers from the gases of very lare stars prior to them. The entire area is related to the formation of the Sco-Cen assocation and the Loop 1 Bubble formation that earth will enter in the next 40-50K years. Literally, there's stuff flying everywhere.

      This entire region is unstable. And if a supernova or hypernova were to go off in this region again, we could expect an earthly outfall about 500 years later. Who knows if a gamma blast like that would, you know, kill stuff on the surface of our planet.

  17. All Wrong! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Ridiculous! That picture is completely distorted! What paper are you looking at?

    It was a lot more like this:

    `O

    1. Re:All Wrong! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ridiculous! That picture is completely distorted! What paper are you looking at?

      It was a lot more like this:

      `O

      Ridiculous! You're the one who saw the wrong paper:
      Yours is not a planet, but obviously a comet!

    2. Re:All Wrong! by windsurfer619 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Or maybe like this?
      .
        O

  18. This star must have a high rate of rotation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    As you can see from the nearly egg-like shape as the centrifugal forces compress the equator.

    And if you observe that the planet orbits below the elliptical, you will have to agree that the planet was a rogue that was captured long after the star's formation.

    1. Re:This star must have a high rate of rotation by techno-vampire · · Score: 1
      As you can see from the nearly egg-like shape as the centrifugal forces compress the equator.

      You are joking, aren't you? Centrifugal force makes it get larger around the equator, not smaller.

      --
      Good, inexpensive web hosting
    2. Re:This star must have a high rate of rotation by Ironchew · · Score: 5, Funny

      The star was spinning so fast that we all heard a "whoooooosh" through the vast expanse of space.

    3. Re:This star must have a high rate of rotation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      The star was spinning so fast that we all heard a "whoooooosh" through the vast expanse of space.

      You are joking, aren't you? Sound doesn't travel through the vacuum of space.

    4. Re:This star must have a high rate of rotation by Sebilrazen · · Score: 2, Funny

      You are joking, aren't you? Sound doesn't travel through the vacuum of space.

      Oh, that's what they meant. I thought they just meant screams didn't travel in the vacuum of space.

      I'm pretty sure I just heard another "whooooooosh" coming from that sector.

      --
      "There are no facts, only interpretations." --Friedrich Nietzsche.
    5. Re:This star must have a high rate of rotation by Kingrames · · Score: 1

      In space, noone can hear you "whoosh."

      --
      If you can read this, I forgot to post anonymously.
  19. Not a planet at all. by lowy · · Score: 3, Funny

    If you look closely you can clearly see that it's just the USS Enterprise (NCC-1701-D) in "outer orbit" doing a routing scientific study. Nothing to see here, move along.

    1. Re:Not a planet at all. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A routing scientific study? Does this mean that the Sun-like Star is actually the home Star system of Bridging Network Devices and other Routers?

      What is this System Called? CISCO?

  20. Just for clarity? by WheelDweller · · Score: 0

    If it's 11 times Jupiter's mass, and we're a fraction of Jupiter's mass, how is that planet "Like us"? Gravity's gonna matter, ya know...

    --
    --- For a good time mail uce@ftc.gov
  21. Re:That's no planet, it's a space station. by jcuervo · · Score: 1, Funny

    "Do you even know who I am?"
    "Weren't you one of the Little Rascals?"

    --
    Assume I was drunk when I posted this.
  22. Neptune? by narcberry · · Score: 1

    roughly 11 times Neptuneâ(TM)s average distance from the sun..

    As much as I'd like to quantify things in reference to Neptune, isn't there a planet your readers are more likely to associate with?

    --
    Modding me -1 troll doesn't make me wrong.
    1. Re:Neptune? by MichaelTheDrummer · · Score: 1

      Yeah there is, but saying it orbits at a distance of 330AU, or 330 times Earth's average distance from the sun doesn't really help. How many football fields is that?

    2. Re:Neptune? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How many football fields is that?

      A what field? How many Libraries of Congress is that? Is that metric or imperial?

    3. Re:Neptune? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, it's already in the summary:
      "The giant planet, the mass of 8 Jupiters, orbits its star at 330 AU, or 11 times the distance to Neptune's orbit."
      The planet is 330 times further away from its star than the Earth is from Sol.

      Seriously though, Neptune is the outer-most planet in our system, hence to use it as a reference when something is really far out.

    4. Re:Neptune? by SQLGuru · · Score: 1

      How many football fields is that?

      http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=330+astronomical+units+in+yards

      330 Astronomical Units = 5.39887795 × 10^13 yards

      I'd proceed further, but I don't know where you live.....is that American Football, Australian Rules Football, or Soccer?

      120yd for American football
      180yd for Australian football
      100-130yd for Soccer (110-120yd for International matches)

      Assuming American football: http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=5.39887795+%C3%97+10%5E13+divided+by+120&btnG=Search
      4.49906496 × 10^11 football fields

      Layne

    5. Re:Neptune? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Excuse me! Pluto!

      You said YOU'D NEVER FORGET!!

    6. Re:Neptune? by narcberry · · Score: 1

      There once was a planet Pluto in our solar system.

      There no longer is.

      There is only 1 thing that is able to destroy an entire planet, the Deathstar. Say no to active SETI!!!

      --
      Modding me -1 troll doesn't make me wrong.
  23. I am sorry, summary is not entirely correct by Fudge+Factor+3000 · · Score: 1

    The star the planet is orbiting around is not a sun-like star. It is a K star, which is cooler and smaller in size than the Sun. I would argue that it is a planetary object near a star, period. It may not even be orbiting the damn thing. You would have to wait a few years to see if the star and the planetary object have common proper motion.

    1. Re:I am sorry, summary is not entirely correct by hey! · · Score: 1

      I thought you were going to say it was not entirely correct because it was not the first picture of a planet orbiting a sun-like star.

      Almost every picture I've ever taken is of a planet orbiting a sun-like star, excepting those pictures I've taken of the night sky. The Earth is, in fact, a planet and as the Sun is very sun-like indeed, the Earth is a planet orbiting a sun-like star.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  24. Re:Don't worry, we won't have to revise any theori by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe the planet is part of the Solar Federation.

  25. Re:Why do we think we KNOW how it works? by Liquidrage · · Score: 1

    I think your line of thinking is wrong based on this statement of yours:

    "You hear all of this 'it works this way' crap in science, only a year later to hear 'oh it doesn't really work that way, we were right but not really right and now we're definately right'"

    You rarely see widely accepted theories in science simply replaced. Instead they are refined. When a theory is widely accepted it is because it fits the evidence. If new evidence leads to a new theory than that new theory also has to explain the evidence that the prior theory did.

    If you take planetary formation for example, it's a lot more then guesses. There is decades and decades of evidence that fit a widely accepted model. If this turned out to be something special, it would likely lead to a refinement of the current theory. There's no need to throw out the baby with the bathwater. The current theory fits the evidence. More then likely they'll find that either this isn't actually a planet orbiting the star or it's orbit is highly elliptical so you're jumping the gun anyways.

    Personally, I think you're acting like what science knows today goes away tomorrow. And that isn't accurate. What science knows today stays. They just might know more tomorrow to make their theories even more detailed and accurate.

  26. So what planets have we seen by rossdee · · Score: 2, Insightful

    orbiting stars that are totally unlike the sun?

    1. Re:So what planets have we seen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    2. Re:So what planets have we seen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      The majority of extra-solar planets so far discovered have been massive, extremely close orbitting bodies; so called 'hot-jupiters', usually 10-20x the mass of our own Jupiter, so they're verging more on being Brown Dwarves than planets.

      The reason for this is that the primary way of discovering an extra solar planet is by measuring the orbital perburbation that the planet causes on it's parent sun - the star seems to wobble or oscillate as it tracks. The secondary way is to measure the change in instensity of the star as a (large) planet passes in front of it relative to us and occludes it.

      Smaller planetary systems, or a planet further from the star means less orbital wobble. Less orbital wobble means that it falls beneath the resolution of the instrumentation in use. Gets lost in the noise basically.

      NB - Orbital wobble is most observable if the stellar disc is perpendicular to our observation. In contrast, occlusion only works if the orbital disc is directly in line with our line of observation. Cases where the disc may be offset by 5-15 degrees will be commensurately harder to detect since the observed wobble is a lot lower. (this is potentially a majority of systems, since our galaxy is basically planar and star system formation could echo this planarity of orientation)

      Initial planetary discoveries were big, bright stars with massive, close-orbitting planets because these are the easiest to distinguish from noise. As we get better instrumentation (primarily orbital telescopes or Very Large Arrays with better noise elimination algoritims) our ability to 'see' smaller, more earth-like planets improves.

      We're still a long way from seeing an Earth Equivalent, but seeing an orbital body around an 'earth-like sun' is a major step forward.

    3. Re:So what planets have we seen by ceoyoyo · · Score: 2, Informative

      This one: http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/badastronomy/2005/04/29/first-exoplanet-imaged/

      It orbits a brown dwarf. A very non-sunlike star.

  27. Re:Theories of planet formation may have to be adj by PhreakOfTime · · Score: 5, Interesting

    1) In the 1700's some French guy starts a list of objects that are in the sky that resemble comets, but are not. They are assumed to be relatively nearby objects. One has the name M31.

    2) In the early 1900's some American guy comes along and looks a little closer at those objects, and finds not only are they not nearby, but they are entire islands of stars, and we live in one of those islands too! And M31 ends up being over 2 million light years away.

    3) In the later part of the 20th century, an astronomical space based telescope, discovers the background variations in the left overs of the big bang, that led to the eventual location of these things now called 'galaxies'

    Charles Messier, Edwin Hubble, and the COBE satellite would like to have a discussion with you about the scientific method.

    In other words, yes. The theories on planet formation will change the larger the sample size gets. Just the same way the awareness and eventual theories of galaxies changed as they were observed more often and became part of a larger sample size - the known visible universe

  28. The underlying models actually change a lot by Morgaine · · Score: 1

    What science knows today stays. They just might know more tomorrow to make their theories even more detailed and accurate.

    That's not really true, strictly speaking, because "more detailed and accurate" sounds like mere refinement, and that's not really what happens. More accurately, tomorrow's theories are broadly consistent with those of yesterday (they have to be, because they need to support the same observations), but the underlying models can be utterly different from today to tomorrow.

    For example, there is no inherent continuity between classical physics and quantum mechanics, beyond the fact that they both predict similar behaviour in their area of overlap. The underlying models are utterly different. The new one isn't just a refinement of the older one, but a fundamental change in underlying concept, and they just converge to yield roughly the same predictions.

    This happens in all areas of science to different degrees, but especially in physics and chemistry where we don't *really* know the reality down at that level, but instead we merely talk about the behaviour of the elements in our model de jour, ie. the atoms and electrons and quarks and so on. We don't even know what mass is, so where there used to be empty space we conjure up quantum vacuum and Higgs bosons etc. The predictions we make remain broadly similar, but the models are not.

    In other words, our models do not express continuity of understanding at all. That's under continuous change, not refinement. What does get more and more refined is the fit that our changing models make with our observations of reality. The correlations between theories and measurements get ever better, but "what science knows today" definitely "goes away tomorrow", because that knowledge is expressed through our models.

    And that's what makes Science so interesting. If all we did was to refine our understanding rather than totally revise our theoretical models, Science would become more boring with each passing year, but there's no chance of that happening at all. :-)

    --
    "The question of whether machines can think is no more interesting than [] whether submarines can swim" - Dijkstra
    1. Re:The underlying models actually change a lot by Repossessed · · Score: 1

      While underlying models do change (Caloric fluid for example), quantum and classical physics are a bad example of this. For the things classical physics deals with, it is still perfectly valid, still taught, and still heavily used. Quantum answers questions left by classical physics, and it gives rules in places where classical does not apply, but quantum physics is just as useless for predicting ballistic trajectories. It's like saying America's Geography replaced Europe's.

      --
      Liberte, Egalite, Fraternite (TM)
    2. Re:The underlying models actually change a lot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For the things classical physics deals with, it is still perfectly valid, still taught, and still heavily used. Quantum answers questions left by classical physics, and it gives rules in places where classical does not apply

      You missed the point though. Quantum mechanics applies to *everything*, not just in the places where classical physics falls down. So while classical physics is still useful, we know that it doesn't represent the actual nature of reality, because QM does that to the best of our knowledge, and they're not the same. QM provides predictions that are much closer to our observations, despite QM being very cumbersome to apply to classical settings.

      QM represents our new and substantially deeper understanding of reality through an entirely different mathematical model (not just by refining a few rough edges in the old model), and it applies in all cases, overriding the old classical theory entirely but of course yielding results that are consistent with it at the macro scale. But that consistency of prediction doesn't mean that QM is an improved version of classical theory. The two have almost no similarity at all to each other, despite yielding results that are very close in many situations.

      So no, classical theory has long failed the test of being a working theory of science, despite our regular use of its approximate formulisms which are based on a knowingly mistaken model of reality. Classical theory is simply WRONG, despite being as useful now as it always was. We now know that it's an incorrect theory which only roughly generates results in the right ballpark. And no doubt the same will happen to QM in time.

      A single reality can't be represented by two different theories simultaneously unless they're duals of each other, but classical and QM are not duals. Instead, QM reduces to classical theory through statistical averaging, and in that process information is lost. You can still use the old theory if the information loss does not matter, but you can't pretend that classical theory still represents our understanding of how the universe works. It does NOT! It has been superseded by the radically different QM as our working theory which has still not been disproven.

      The old classical model has now become just a highly useful engineering approximation, but it can no longer be called a valid theory of science since it has been trivially disproven at both ends of the scale (and even in the middle given good instruments), while QM continues to be valid at all scales tested so far. (We don't know how to merge QM with gravity, but that failure is one of theory, not a failure of a testable prediction of QM.)

      "Yields fairly good results" and "Is a valid/working theory of science" are entirely different things, and should not be confused. The scientific method turns a previously working theory into an invalid theory when the predictions of the theory are observed to be false, and that's what happened to classical. The fact that classical can still deliver very usable results in a subset of cases doesn't change that. Phoenix would not be sitting safely on Mars if we had relied on classical theory, because it's wrong. ;-)

    3. Re:The underlying models actually change a lot by Liquidrage · · Score: 1

      You picked an area of science where there is no denial that we're not sure what's there.

      Basically, you have all these people being very open that we're still looking for the GUT, and you're using the lack of a GUT as your example for the models changing. I don't agree with that, and I'd say you're on a tangent with your post. The models for QM and Relativity aren't really changing. QM and Relativty are two theories that are very very solid.

      Science doesn't know everything. For example, there is no GUT that unites QM with Relativity. Furthermore, whatever theory comes along that eventual unifies the two will likely replace the two, but it also explain everything that they currently explain. Which was my point.

    4. Re:The underlying models actually change a lot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For example, there is no GUT that unites QM with Relativity. Furthermore, whatever theory comes along that eventual unifies the two will likely replace the two

      We agree then, since my point was precisely the one you mention here, ie. that new theories frequently introduce radically new models that replace preceding ones and hence create a step function in understanding (since understanding is described through the precepts of our models), when I wrote:

      In other words, our [sequence of] models do not express continuity of understanding at all. That's under continuous change, not refinement.

      There tends to be good continuity in the predictive capacity of successive theories, which is no surprise since they all have to explain the same reality. But to the layman it often comes as a surprise that the theory part of Science commonly progresses not by building on old understanding, but by bulldozing the site and erecting a new edifice out of entirely different materials.

  29. Wow! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...[I]t's just the USS Enterprise...doing a routing scientific study.

    I guess that whole "Internet in Space" thing is really starting to pan out, huh? Cisco must be thrilled.

  30. Kevin123149@hotmail.com by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It could very well be a Star!

    1. Re:Kevin123149@hotmail.com by CorporateSuit · · Score: 1

      It could very well be a Star!

      It will be if it wins the next American Idol!

      --
      I am the richest astronaut ever to win the superbowl.
  31. Re:Theories of planet formation may have to be adj by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    And in the early 21st century, observations at the LHC and a new binocular radio telescope show conclusively that several assumed constants (Hubble constant, gravitational constant, age of universe, etc) were actually way off, and the stars are all really etched into a dome circling the earth about 300 miles up.

  32. MOD PARENT DOWN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Which part of 'sun like' didn't you understand? The wonderful mod system at work again. Interesting? Not.

  33. i am waiting for an image like this by hibji · · Score: 1

    http://z.about.com/d/space/1/0/c/e/earth_moon.jpg

    of an extrasolar planet. I think it would be amazing and hopefully spur people's imaginations to see beyond themselves.

    Any astronomers out there care to speculate on the feasibility getting an image like this?

    1. Re:i am waiting for an image like this by Urkki · · Score: 1

      Getting an image like that from a planet orbiting different star would require "collecting photons" for a long long time. Surface details would take even longer, as the rotation of the planet would need to be taken into account too. And it would always be an image of a single planet, and perhaps a separate image for a moon orbiting it, but getting them in the same picture would be just "photoshopping" the images together.

      And the image would not really be a photo or a snapshot, but instead made "artificially" by combining photons received over long time. It would be more like a globe map of the planets surface, and then you could render an image of the planet from any angle, or even make a physical map globe.

      Sort of like there are "fake" images of a busy city that are void of people. They can be made by taking a lot of pictures from same spot, cutting people out of them (leaving holes in the image), and then combining enough of these images so that all holes can be filled. Except here you wouldn't have images with holes, you would have "images" with just one pixel of color each, and then you'd combine enough of these to get a full picture.

  34. Why so puzzling? by Ceres54 · · Score: 1
    In the article the discoverers note that there is a chance that the object is not bound to the proposed parent star as it is in a young grouping of stars that is likely to have a few unattached planets roaming around loose. However, they then state that if it is attached the are puzzled by how it came to form out so far from the primary.

    I don't understand why this would be so hard to understand. Many stars are found in binary or even trinary system. The closest stars (Alpha, Beta and Proxima Centauri) are a trinary system.

    If full stars can form at a distance from each other in the same original gas cloud, why not a star and a 'failed star' or 'super jupiter'?

  35. beautiful photo by radarsat1 · · Score: 2

    This photo is just beautiful. Congratulations to the astronomers involved!

  36. Easy answer by Alarash · · Score: 1

    We don't have to adjust the theories of planet formation because of this. It's simply a Dyson Sphere. The actual planet is much smaller than that.

    1. Re:Easy answer by Daetrin · · Score: 2, Funny

      They built the Dyson sphere around the planet but _not_ around the star to capture all its energy? Someone needs to grab the picture of this and caption it "Ur doin it rong!"

      --
      This Space Intentionally Left Blank
    2. Re:Easy answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A Dyson Sphere around a planet? I hope it's a warm planet.

  37. Re:Theories of planet formation may have to be adj by iONiUM · · Score: 1

    I KNEW IT!

  38. How big is the star? by MrKaos · · Score: 1

    If the planet is a Super Jupiter and it's 330 au out, that star must be something like 100au, does anyone actually know? I couldn't see it in the article.

    --
    My ism, it's full of beliefs.
  39. Re:Planetary Science - Other outer objects by Markvs · · Score: 1

    Oort Cloud object 2006 SQ372, a minor planet (http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2008/08/080819-new-planet.html) is 1600AU-2000AU out from Sol. By way of comparison, Sedna is 88AU.

    Right now, it being 472 light years away (29,849,752 AU! or, 111 trips from Sol to Proxima Centauri...) we don't even know if it is a dual sun or not. Let alone what local conditions are like.

    The heck with the Delta Quadrant! This this thing is FAR AWAY.

    So personally, 330AU may not be irrational for a large solar system especially if the star in question has an overactive gravitational field or no nearby star systems to contend with. Our sun has 12 solar systems within 10 light years. Who knows what this star has to affect it?

    --
    46. The Hobo smiles, his eyes glaze over, and he burps. "Beware the man who has lived longer than the Wasteland."
  40. Re:Theories of planet formation may have to be adj by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...but the Sun still orbits the flat earth?

  41. Re:Theories of planet formation may have to be adj by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's more like 300 nowadays.

    "The first confirmed detections were made in the 1990s; since 2000, more than 15 have been discovered every year. The frequency of detection is increasing with 61 planets detected in 2007."

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extrasolar_planet

  42. Googol! by Wooky_linuxer · · Score: 1

    Wasn't it "googol"? And from what I've heard, it wasn't coined by Sagan, but by the nephew(son?) of some mathematician. I guess Sagan invented googolplex though. Someone less lazy than me please Google for it.

    --
    Where is that guy who'd die defending what I had to say when I need him?
    1. Re:Googol! by Orion+Blastar · · Score: 1

      Yes and yes. It was Googol but it is also spelled Google and Googel in various languages. They all mean almost the same thing, ten to the power of a hundred. That is how many web pages Google.com claims it can handle, that is a large number used to count stars, and used in math and science.

      --
      Remember, Slashdot does not have a -1 disagree moderation, and no, troll, flamebait, and overrated are not substitutes.