Jan 26, 2016

Orphan Planet May Have Estranged Parent Star

An orphan planet free-floating in space more than 100 light-years from Earth may have a parent star after all, though the relationship could hardly be considered close.

New research shows the planet, a massive world 11 to 15 times bigger than Jupiter, may be orbiting its host star about 7,000 times farther away than Earth circles the sun.

At this distance, light from the star would take a month to reach the planet, research published Monday in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society shows.

“This is the widest planet system found so far,” astronomer Niall Deacon, with England’s University of Hertfordshire, said in a statement.

Both the planet, known as 2MASS J2126 and its prospective parent star, TYC 9486-927-1, were discovered more than eight years ago, but the relationship between the two remained unknown.

Deacon and colleagues found that despite being more than 621 billion miles, or 1 trillion kilometers, apart the two objects are moving together in space.

“Nobody had made the link between the objects before. The planet is not quite as lonely as we first thought,” Deacon said.

Scientists don’t know how a planet could end up so far away from its host star. 2MASS J2126 is almost big enough to be a star itself and may be another type of brown dwarf, or failed star.

"Pinning down the formation of this system is difficult and lends intrigue to this odd pair," co-investigator Josh S‎chlieder, a post-doctorate researcher at NASA's Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, Calif., wrote in an email to Discovery News.

"It is easier to infer how the system likely did not form. Since the mass ratio is relatively high and the separation so extreme, it is unlikely that 2MASS J2126 formed near its current location from a disk of material orbiting the primary star, similar to the gas giants in our solar system."

Schlieder suggests that 2MASS J2126 may have formed closer to its partner, TYC 9486-927-1, and then migrated outward. This process could have been a result of orbital interactions with currently unseen additional companions, he said.

Read more at Discovery News

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