News on Exoplanets
- Freefloationg exoplanet may outnumber stars
- First direct ligth from Earthlike exoplanet
- Look for Jupiter-like planets, when you search for Earth-like planets
- Stars occasionally capture wandering planets
- Discovery of two planetary babies
- New study suggests the Solarsystem is the norm
- A star with 9 exoplanets
- Discovery of 2 very old exoplanets
- Millions of Earthlike planets in th eMilkyway
- Premature planetary-formation
- Runaway planets
- Kepler releases new catalog-2321 planet candidates
- Water in the atmosphere of a super-Earth
- New 3D model for planetary accretion
- Red dwarf stars may be more habitable than imagined
- Our galaxy may swarm with free--floating planets
- Hubble reveals a new class of exoplanet
- Discovery of potential habitable exoplanet
- 11 new solarsystems hosting 26 planets discovered
- First SETI observations of Kepler candidates
- Discovery of smallest known exoplanets
- New class of planetary system
- Searching for habitable exo-moons
- Discovery of 2 Earth-size planets raises questions about stellar evolution
- Kepler discovers first truly Earth-sized planets
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A planet made of diamond
Thursday, 25 August 2011 14:14
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| Astronomy - Exoplanets |
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A once-massive star that’s been transformed into a small planet made of diamond: that’s what astronomers think they’ve found in our Milky Way. The discovery has been made by an international research team, led by Professor Matthew Bailes of Swinburne University of Technology in Melbourne, Australia, and is reported in today’s [Thursday August 25, 2011] issue of the journal Science.
For the newly discovered pulsar, known as PSR J1719-1438, the astronomers noticed that the arrival times of the pulses were systematically modulated. They concluded that this was due to the gravitational pull of a small companion planet, orbiting the pulsar in The pulsar and its planet are part of the Milky Way’s plane of stars and lie 4.000 light-years away in the constellation of Serpens (the Snake). The system is about an eighth of the way towards the galactic center from the Earth. The modulations in the radio pulses tell astronomers several things about the planet. But pulsar J1719-1438 and its companion are so close together that the companion can only be a very stripped-down white dwarf, one that has lost its outer layers and over 99.9 per cent of its original mass. “This remnant is likely to be largely carbon and oxygen, because a star made of lighter elements like hydrogen and helium would be too big to fit the measured orbit,” said Dr. Michael Keith (CSIRO), one of the research team members. The density means that this material is certain to be crystalline: The discovery of the new binary system is of special significance for him and fellow team member Professor Andrew Lyne, who jointly ignited the whole pulsar-planet field in 1991 with what proved to an erroneous claim of the first extra-solar planet. The next year though the first extra-solar planetary system was discovered around the pulsar PSR B1257+12. Source: Press-release from Swinburne University |





