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By Carolyn Collins Petersen, TheSpacewriter
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Planets Just Keep Surprising Us

Tuesday, September 18, 2012 13:52
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(Before It's News)

They Show Up in the Darndest Places!

So, planets aren’t just for our solar system anymore. The Kepler Mission is showing us that in the field of view it’s viewing, there are probably well over a thousand worlds circling distant stars (maybe more).  Before Kepler blasted off on its planet-finding survey, ground-based astronomers were finding worlds, too.  Add to that the current crop of ground-based telescopes and the COROT mission findings and the field of planetary exploration beyond our solar system is wide open for discovery!

Every time astronomers spot more planets, the findings rewrite the rule books about planets and where they could possibly exist.  Astronomers once thought that pulsars couldn’t have planets. And, that massive, Jupiter-type planets probably formed well away from their stars. And that clusters packed with stars probably didn’t have planets.

Well, all of those rules have been broken. There WAS a pulsar with a planet spotted in 1992, and it was a great discovery.  More recently, there have been enough so-called “hot Jupiters” discovered close to their stars that astronomers have been reconsidering theories of planetary formation to account for just how those hot bad boys get up close and personal with their stellar hosts.

Astronomers have discovered two gas giant planets orbiting stars in the Beehive cluster, a collection of about 1,000 tightly packed stars. Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

Now, the first time, astronomers using a ground-based instrument at the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory’s Fred Lawrence Whipple Observatory in Arizona found two planets as they studied the crowded inner regions of the Beehive Cluster, which is a pretty crowded place for a planet to grow up.  They found these so-called “hot Jupiters” by measuring the slight gravitational wobble that orbiting planets cause in the motions of their parent stars.

This was something of a surprise because earlier searches of other clusters had turned up two planets around massive stars but none had been found around stars like our Sun until now.

The two new Beehive planets are called Pr0201b and Pr0211b. The star’s name followed by a “b” is the standard naming convention for planets.

So, what does this discovery mean?  Identifying a couple of boiling hot planets in a crowded starfield is pretty good evidence that planets can sprout up just about anywhere. I mean, if they can exist near pulsars, which are pretty hostile environments created by the deaths of supermassive stars, then cropping up in a region where the stars are thick (but not yet dying) may not be so difficult.

If you’ve never seen the Beehive, it’s a cluster most easily visible overhead starting in early spring.  All its stars formed from the same nebular birthplace, so they have pretty much the same chemical compositions.  So, at least two of the stars have enough heavy elements surrounding them in circumstellar space to create planets.

Want to learn more about these Beehive Bad Boys?  Check out the NASA press release right here!



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