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Massive Exoplanet Discovered, Challenges Established Planet Formation Theories

sfcrazy writes "A giant exoplanet that is in the most distant orbit ever seen around its host star, has been recently discovered. Dubbed HD 106906 b, the newly discovered planet is relatively young (13 million years old, compare this to our 4.5 billion years old Earth) and bigger than any other planet discovered till date. It is 11 times the size of Jupiter, and that's what makes it a most singular discovery."

5 of 129 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Can someone who knows about astronomy fill me i by Virtucon · · Score: 5, Informative
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  2. Re:11 times the size of Jupiter? by SJHillman · · Score: 4, Informative

    If it's 11 times the diameter, then gravity would be pretty tame at the surface unless it's extremely dense. For example, Jupiter's diameter is 11.2 times that of Earth, but the surface gravity is only 2.64 times that of Earth. Saturn and Uranus both have equatorial surface gravities roughly equal to Venus, in spite of being 9.44 and 4 Earth diameters, respectively.

    Source: http://www.windows2universe.org/our_solar_system/planets_table.html

  3. Re:Can someone who knows about astronomy fill me i by bigHairyDog · · Score: 4, Informative

    OK I answered my own question with some googling.

    The age of the exoplanet is not independently derived, but instead, taken from the age of the host star. This too can be difficult to determine. For isolated stars, there are precious few methods (such as gyrochronology) and they generally have large errors associated with them. Thus, instead of looking for isolated stars, astronomers searching for young exoplanets have tended to focus on clusters which can be dated more easily using the main sequence turn off method.

    http://www.universetoday.com/76495/the-hunt-for-young-exoplanets/

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  4. Re:Upper limit on planets? Lower limit on stars by Zephyn · · Score: 5, Informative

    That's the mass threshold for deuterium fusion. No fusion = planet, deuterium fusion = brown dwarf, hydrogen fusion = main sequence star.

    So at 11 Jovian masses, the planet is close, but not quite big enough to reach brown dwarf status.

  5. headline isn't quite correct by The+Bad+Astronomer · · Score: 5, Informative

    The headline as submitted isn't really correct. The planet is not the biggest found; there are several whose mass may be larger, like the exoplanets announced just last week (and this planet has 11 times the mass of Jupiter; we don't know its actual size). The real issue with HD 106906 b is that it is so far out from its parent star, much farther out than planets with that ass should form. Either it formed farther in and got tossed out (which is unlikely) or it formed where it was, which current theories say is difficult; usually objects forming that far out have much higher mass. I explain all this in my own blog post about it.

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    *** Phil Plait, aka The Bad Astronomer http://www.badastronomy.com