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Keyword: xplanets

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  • Astronomers Discover Giant Planet Orbiting Tiny Star, Defying Planet Formation Theories

    06/05/2025 9:39:34 AM PDT · by Red Badger · 36 replies
    Daily Galaxy ^ | June 05, 2025 | Staff
    A groundbreaking discovery in the field of exoplanet research is forcing scientists to reconsider long-held theories about how planets form. An international team of astronomers, led by the University of Warwick, recently revealed the existence of TOI-6894b, a giant planet orbiting the ultra-low-mass star TOI-6894, in a study published in Nature Astronomy. This find has raised significant questions about the accuracy of the prevailing models of planet formation, which have long argued that gas giants like TOI-6894b cannot form around small stars. Unlikely Host Star: The Tiny TOI-6894 At the heart of this discovery is TOI-6894, a red dwarf star...
  • Perpendicular Planet: A 90° Orbit Over Twin Suns Leaves Scientists Stunned

    06/02/2025 8:21:46 AM PDT · by Red Badger · 17 replies
    Scitech Daily ^ | June 02, 2025 | NASA
    A bizarre planet may orbit two brown dwarfs in a steep, pole-skimming path—an unheard-of tilt that challenges our understanding of planetary motion. Detected via gravitational wobbles, it might be the first polar-orbiting circumbinary planet ever found. Credit: SciTechDaily.com =================================================================== Astronomers have discovered one of the weirdest planetary systems yet: a possible planet, 2M1510 b, appears to orbit over the poles of two brown dwarfs in a sharply tilted path—almost perpendicular to their own orbit. This freakish setup, unlike anything in our solar system, was detected not by a dip in starlight but through subtle gravitational wobbles captured using ESO’s Very...
  • Scientists Find “Up to a 40% Chance” Theoretical ‘Planet Nine’ Exists Given the Correct Conditions

    05/29/2025 11:45:00 AM PDT · by Red Badger · 38 replies
    The Debrief ^ | May 28, 2025 | Christopher Plain
    Scientists modeling planetary system formation scenarios say there could be a 40% chance that a hypothetical ‘Planet Nine’, believed by many to lurk at the outer reaches of the Sun’s orbit, could exist. The study, conducted by researchers at Rice University, also suggests most of these planets don’t end up captured by their host star’s gravity but instead get ejected from the star’s orbit altogether and spend the rest of their lives roaming the galaxy as “rogue planets.” “Our simulations show that if the early solar system underwent two specific instability phases—the growth of Uranus and Neptune and the later...
  • Doubt cast on claim of 'hints' of life on faraway planet

    05/24/2025 6:01:56 AM PDT · by Salman · 27 replies
    Space Daily ^ | May 24, 2025 | Daniel Lawler
    When astronomers announced last month they might have discovered the most promising hints of alien life yet on a distant planet, the rare good news raised hopes humanity could soon learn we are not alone in the universe. But several recent studies looking into the same data have found that there is not enough evidence to support such lofty claims, with one scientist accusing the astronomers of "jumping the gun". Two of Madhusudhan's former students, Luis Welbanks of Arizona State University and Matthew Nixon of Maryland University, were among the researchers who have since re-analysed the data behind the announcement....
  • NASA's Hubble Tracks a Roaming Magnetar of Unknown Origin

    05/23/2025 10:07:28 AM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 17 replies
    NASA Hubble Mission Team ^ | April 15, 2025 | Editor Andrea Gianopoulos
    Researchers using NASA's Hubble Space Telescope have discovered the magnetar called SGR 0501+4516 is traversing our galaxy from an unknown place of origin. Researchers say that this runaway magnetar is the likeliest candidate in our Milky Way galaxy for a magnetar that was not born in a supernova explosion as initially predicted. It is so strange it might even offer clues to the mechanism behind events known as fast radio bursts...But a decade-long study with Hubble cast doubt on the magnetar's birthplace. After initial observations with ground-based telescopes shortly after SGR 0501+4516's discovery, researchers used Hubble's exquisite sensitivity and steady...
  • Scientists Just Announced a New Solar System Member – And It’s Unlike Anything We’ve Seen

    05/23/2025 9:22:44 AM PDT · by Red Badger · 47 replies
    Daily Galaxy ^ | May 23, 2025 | Staff
    Astronomers just found a frozen world on a 25,000-year orbit—hidden in plain sight and ready to rewrite the outer solar system. ================================================================ Image Credit: images of dwarf planets from NASA/JPL-Caltech; image of 2017 OF201 from Sihao Cheng et al. | The Daily Galaxy --Great Discoveries Channel ================================================================= A distant, icy world has just been added to our solar system’s official roster, and its strange orbit might challenge one of the biggest space mysteries of our time. According to a study published on arXiv, the object—known as 2017 OF201—is not just any distant rock. It’s a trans-Neptunian object (TNO) that could...
  • Planet Nine: First Real Clue After Decades of Searching [9:37]

    05/02/2025 7:55:50 PM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 48 replies
    YouTube ^ | May 2, 2025 | NASASpaceNews
    Is Planet Nine real? A new study may have just found the strongest clue yet. By analyzing decades-old infrared data from IRAS and AKARI satellites, scientists have spotted a slow-moving object in the outer Solar System—exactly where Planet Nine is predicted to be. If confirmed, it would be the first new planet discovered in over 170 years. Dive into the science, the discovery, and what it means for our cosmic future in this exciting episode. Planet Nine: First Real Clue After Decades of Searching | 9:37 NASASpaceNews | 511K subscribers | 3,717 views | May 2, 2025 Chapters: 00:00 Introduction...
  • Rare Alignment Gives NASA A Chance To Peer Into Uranus

    04/25/2025 9:22:55 PM PDT · by Red Badger · 50 replies
    IFL Science ^ | April 24, 2025 | Dr. Alfredo Carpineti
    Fifteen observatories across the US, Mexico, and Hawai’i looked at the planet eclipsing a star. Uranus, its rings, and some of its moons as seen by JWST. Image credit: NASA, ESA,CSA, STScI, Joseph DePasqual ************************************************************ On April 7, 2025, star HIP 16271 was occulted by Uranus. As a star, it is by no means famous. A yellow-white star in the constellation of Taurus, not bright enough to be visible to the naked eye given its distance – about 400 light-years away – but bright enough to allow astronomers to look into the atmosphere of Uranus in great detail for the...
  • Planet Found Orbiting Two Stars at a Perfect 90-Degree Angle

    04/18/2025 6:36:49 AM PDT · by Red Badger · 27 replies
    Scitech Daily ^ | April 16, 2025 | European Southern Observatory (ESO)
    A strange new planet has been found circling two stars at a right angle — like something out of sci-fi. It’s the first solid evidence of a so-called polar orbit around a binary system. Credit: SciTechDaily.com *************************************************************************** Astronomers using ESO’s Very Large Telescope have discovered a truly bizarre planet — one that orbits two stars at a perfect 90-degree angle. This “polar planet” circles a rare eclipsing pair of brown dwarfs, making it the first confirmed world with this kind of alignment. It was a surprising and accidental find, defying expectations and proving that planet formation in extreme orbital setups...
  • Scientists detect signature of life on a distant planet, study suggests

    04/17/2025 3:17:37 PM PDT · by hardspunned · 48 replies
    CNN ^ | 4/17/25 | Ashley Strickland
    A team of astronomers have detected what they call the most promising signs to date of a possible biosignature, or signs of past or present life linked to biological activity, on an exoplanet named K2-18b. But the study authors, and other experts, remain cautious and have not declared a definitive discovery of life beyond our planet. Using the James Webb Space Telescope, the team detected chemical fingerprints within the atmosphere of K2-18b that suggest the presence of dimethyl sulfide or DMS, and potentially dimethyl disulfide or DMDS. On Earth, both molecules are only produced by microbial life, typically marine phytoplankton....
  • Astronomers Detect ‘Strongest Indication Yet’ of Life on Exoplanet 120 Light-Years From Earth

    04/17/2025 9:38:23 AM PDT · by Red Badger · 39 replies
    Gateway Pundit ^ | April 17, 2025 | Ben Kew
    Scientists may be getting closer than ever to answering the question of whether we are alone in the universe. According to The New York Times, a team of astronomers now claims to have found the strongest indication yet for extraterrestrial life. The location in question is a giant planet known as K2-18b, which orbits a star 120 light-years away. Repeated analyses of the planet’s atmosphere have found a high concentration of a molecule that, on Earth, is produced exclusively by living organisms like marine algae. “It is in no one’s interest to claim prematurely that we have detected life,” said...
  • Astronomers detect a possible signature of life on a distant planet

    04/16/2025 7:27:48 PM PDT · by Coronal · 36 replies
    Seattle Times ^ | April 16, 2025 | Carl Zimmer
    The search for life beyond Earth has led scientists to explore many suggestive mysteries, from plumes of methane on Mars to clouds of phosphine gas on Venus. But as far as we can tell, Earth’s inhabitants remain alone in the cosmos. Now a team of researchers is offering what it contends is the strongest indication yet of extraterrestrial life, not in our solar system but on a massive planet, known as K2-18b, that orbits a star 120 light-years from Earth. A repeated analysis of the exoplanet’s atmosphere suggests an abundance of a molecule that on Earth has only one known...
  • Clues of alien life discovered 120 light years from Earth as scientists detect ocean-covered planet 'teeming with organisms'

    04/16/2025 6:12:34 PM PDT · by fruser1 · 93 replies
    UK Daily Mail ^ | 4/16/2025 | Xantha Leatham
    Using data from the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), the astronomers, led by the University of Cambridge, have identified the chemical fingerprints dimethyl sulfide (DMS) and dimethyl disulfide (DMDS) – molecules that indicate life. Here on Earth, these molecules are only produced by living organisms – primarily microbial life such as marine phytoplankton. The molecules have been detected in the atmosphere of exoplanet K2-18b, which is located around 124 light-years from Earth in the constellation of Leo.
  • Webb Captures a Planet’s Final Plunge Into Its Star – And It Wasn’t What Scientists Expected

    04/15/2025 5:50:02 AM PDT · by Red Badger · 39 replies
    Scitech Daily ^ | April 15, 2025 | Space Telescope Science Institute
    A dramatic twist in cosmic storytelling: A Jupiter-sized planet didn’t get swallowed by an expanding red giant, as astronomers once believed. Instead, NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope uncovered that the planet spiraled inward over time, ultimately plunging into its star in a fiery cosmic demise. Credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, Ralf Crawford (STScI) ********************************************************************** Lingering Brightness Provides Evidence for How the Planet Met Its Demise Each year, scientists from around the world compete for a chance to use NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope. Proposals go through a rigorous review process, and approved projects are added to Webb’s observation schedule, which is...
  • A Day on Uranus Just Got Longer

    04/08/2025 12:25:48 PM PDT · by rdl6989 · 29 replies
    newsweek ^ | Apr 08, 2025 | Ian Randall
    Astronomers have just revealed that a day on Uranus is longer than was previously thought, at 17 hours, 14 minutes and 52 seconds. This is 28 seconds longer than the previous estimate, which was made by NASA's Voyager 2 probe during its flyby of the ice giant planet back in 1986. The new figure—which is 1,000 times more accurate—was calculated based on a decade's worth of observations of Uranus's aurorae made by NASA/ESA's Hubble Space Telescope. The long-term data on the planet's auroral emissions enabled the researchers to track the positions of the planet's magnetic poles and, by extension, its...
  • ‘Ghosts of the radio universe’: Astronomers discover slew of faint circular objects

    04/02/2025 8:16:53 PM PDT · by Red Badger · 9 replies
    Study Finds ^ | March 04, 2025 | Research led by Miroslav Filipovic, Luke Barnes, and Nicholas Tothill (Western Sydney University); A
    Some of the objects captured by ASKAP. (Author provided) ******************************************************************************* Radio astronomers see what the naked eye can’t. As we study the sky with telescopes that record radio signals rather than light, we end up seeing a lot of circles. The newest generation of radio telescopes – including the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP) and MeerKAT, a telescope in South Africa – is revealing incredibly faint cosmic objects, never before seen. In astronomy, surface brightness is a measure that tells us how easily visible an object is. The extraordinary sensitivity of MeerKAT and ASKAP is now revealing a new...
  • 'We had less than a 2% chance to find this': James Webb telescope uncovers baffling 'Big Wheel', one of the most massive galaxies in the early universe

    03/21/2025 9:55:16 PM PDT · by Red Badger · 29 replies
    Live Science ^ | March 21, 2025 | Themiya Nanayakkara
    Astronomers using the James Webb Space Telescope have discovered an object they've dubbed 'Big Wheel,' a gargantuan galaxy spinning through the early universe and growing larger by the second. The Big Wheel alongside some of its neighbors. (Image credit: Weichen Wang et al. (2025), CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) Deep observations from the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) have revealed an exceptionally large galaxy in the early universe. It's a cosmic giant whose light has travelled over 12 billion years to reach us. We've dubbed it the Big Wheel, with our findings published March 17 in Nature Astronomy. This giant disk galaxy...
  • James Webb Space Telescope Snaps The First Images of an Exoplanet with Possible Life-Giving CO₂

    03/17/2025 11:33:35 AM PDT · by Red Badger · 15 replies
    The Debrief ^ | March 17, 2025 | Ryan Whalen
    New James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) images show the first carbon dioxide-containing planet discovered outside of Earth’s solar system, displaying the telescope’s ground breaking research capabilities. One hundred thirty thousand lightyears from Earth, the multiplanet system HR 8799 has been a primary target for astronomers studying planet formation. The new research confirms JWST’s ability to measure an exoplanet’s atmospheric chemistry and suggests the four planets formed similarly to Jupiter and Saturn, coalescing around a solid core. Viewing a Young Solar System At only 30 million years old, HR 8799 is relatively young compared to Earth’s 4.6 billion-year-old solar system. Due...
  • Four tiny planets found orbiting one of our nearest stars...MAROON-X instrument finds evidence for planets around famous Barnard's Star

    03/12/2025 12:32:19 PM PDT · by Red Badger · 14 replies
    Science Daily ^ | March 11, 2025 | University of Chicago
    Astronomers have revealed new evidence that there are not just one but four tiny planets circling around Barnard's Star, the second-nearest star system to Earth. The four planets, each only about 20 to 30% the mass of Earth, are so close to their home star that they zip around the entire star in a matter of days. That probably means they are too hot to be habitable, but the find is a new benchmark for discovering smaller planets around nearby stars. "It's a really exciting find -- Barnard's Star is our cosmic neighbor, and yet we know so little about...
  • Scientists discover smallest galaxy ever seen: 'It's like having a perfectly functional human being that's the size of a grain of rice'

    03/12/2025 12:39:44 PM PDT · by Red Badger · 23 replies
    Space.com ^ | March 12, 2025 | Robert Lea
    "We thought they were basically all going to be fried because the entire universe turned into a vat of boiling oil." ====================================================================== The newfound galaxy, Andromeda XXXV, is seen within the white ellipse. (Image credit: CFHT/MegaCam/PAndAS (Principal investigator: Alan McConnachie; Image processing: Marcos Arias)) Astronomers have discovered a collection of tiny galaxies located roughly 3 million light-years away that includes the smallest and faintest galaxy ever seen. This galaxy, designated Andromeda XXXV, and its compatriots orbiting our neighbor galaxy, Andromeda, could change how we think about cosmic evolution. That's because dwarf galaxies this small should have been destroyed in the...
 
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