*NEWS*PLANET’SEEN’AROUND DISTANT SUN

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Date: Thursday May 5, 2005 09:55:00 am
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    Planet ‘seen’ around distant sun
    European and American scientists say they have photographed a
    planet outside the Solar System for the first time.

    The European Southern Observatory group said the red image is the first
    direct shot of a planet around another star.

    The planet, known as 2M1207b, is about five times the size of Jupiter and is
    orbiting at a distance nearly twice as far as Neptune is from our Sun.

    The parent star and planet are more than 200 light-years away near the
    southern constellation of Hydra.

    There has been a lot of competition among astronomers to secure the first
    direct picture of an exoplanet.

    When the ESO group first released the picture last September there was doubt
    over whether the star and planet were gravitationally bound.



    The new images essentially confirm our 2004 finding

    But follow-up images taken at the Very Large Telescope facility in Chile show
    the two objects are moving together.

    “Our new images are quite convincing,” said Gael Chauvin, an Eso astronomer.

    “This really is a planet – the first planet that has ever been imaged outside
    of our Solar System,” he added.

    Tough task

    It is extremely difficult for current technology to detect exoplanets – let
    alone get a clear shot of one.

    All of the 130 or so exoplanets so far discovered have been found using
    indirect methods – looking for changes in the properties of stars (their
    brightness or way they move) that can be explained only by the presence of a
    planet.

    Now we have a direct observation, the Eso team says.

    The star has the uninspiring catalogue number 2M1207A. It is a brown dwarf,
    or “failed star” – an object whose mass of hydrogen and helium has failed to
    trigger the nuclear reactions that would make it shine brightly like normal
    stars.

    At the time of 2M1207b’s discovery, it was impossible to prove that the red
    speck caught in the original images was not a background object, such as an
    unusual galaxy or a peculiar cool star.

    The new observations show with high confidence that the two objects are
    moving together and hence are gravitationally bound.

    “The two objects – the giant planet and the young brown dwarf – are moving
    together; we have observed them for a year, and the new images essentially
    confirm our 2004 finding,” said Benjamin Zuckerman, a University of
    California-Los Angeles (UCLA) professor of physics and astronomy.

    Anne-Marie Lagrange, another member of the team from the Grenoble Observatory
    in France, looks towards the future: “Our discovery represents a first step
    towards one of the most important holy grails of modern astrophysics: to
    characterise the physical structure and chemical composition of giant and,
    eventually, terrestrial-like planets.”

    Dr Chauvin added: “Given the rather unusual properties of the
    2M1207 system, the giant planet most probably did not form like the planets in
    our Solar System.”

    “Instead it must have formed the same way our Sun formed, by gravitational
    collapse of a cloud of gas and dust.”

    As a consequence, there are bound to be some scientists who will still
    question if 2M1207b really is a planet.

    Lynne Hillenbrand, an assistant professor of astronomy at the California
    Institute of Technology, told the Associated Press news agency: “The claim of an
    object being a planet is subject to one’s definition of planet, and there are
    different camps on what that definition is.”

    What everybody wants is a direct image of a rocky planet like Earth circling
    another star. But this will not come until we get the next generation of
    super-telescopes capable of resolving such small, faint objects.

    The latest research has been accepted in Astronomy and Astrophysics, a
    premier journal in astronomy.

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