Astronomers Captured The Birth Of The Youngest Planet

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An artist’s impression of the gas giant planet thought to be forming in the orbit of young star HD
Birth of a Giant Planet
Images of the gas and dust surrounding HD 100546, taken by the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope (left) and the NACO system on the ESO’s VLT (right)

Astronomers using ESO’s Very Large Telescope have obtained what is likely the first direct observation of a forming planet still embedded in a thick disc of gas and dust. If confirmed, this discovery will greatly improve our understanding of how planets form and allow astronomers to test the current theories against an observable target.

An international team led by Sascha Quanz an astronomer at ETH Zurich in Switzerland has studied the disc of gas and dust that surrounds the young star HD 100546, a relatively nearby neighbour located 335 light-years from Earth. They were surprised to find what seems to be a planet in the process of being formed, still embedded in the disc of material around the young star. The candidate planet would be a gas giant similar to Jupiter.

An artist’s impression of the gas giant planet thought to be forming in the orbit of young star HD
An artist’s impression of the gas giant planet thought to be forming in the orbit of young star HD

“So far, planet formation has mostly been a topic tackled by computer simulations,” says Sascha Quanz. “If our discovery is indeed a forming planet, then for the first time scientists will be able to study the planet formation process and the interaction of a forming planet and its natal environment empirically at a very early stage.”

HD 100546 is a well-studied object, and it has already been suggested that a giant planet orbits about six times further from the star than the Earth is from the Sun. The newly found planet candidate is located in the outer regions of the system, about ten times further out.

Birth of a Giant Planet
A chart showing the position of HD 100546 in the southern constellation of Musca (The Fly)

Since the discovery of the first exoplanet around a sun-like star in 1995, several hundred planetary systems have been identified, leading to a significant growth in the theory of how planets are formed. However, up until now, there has been no direct observation (and therefore, confirmation) of the process. If the VLT’s observations are confirmed, then the discovery will significantly aid our understanding of the process, allowing astronomers to test current theories for the first time.

The planet candidate around HD 100546 was detected as a faint blob located in the circumstellar disc revealed thanks to the NACO adaptive optics instrument on ESO’s VLT, combined with pioneering data analysis techniques. The observations were made using a special coronagraph in NACO, which operates at near-infrared wavelengths and suppresses the brilliant light coming from the star at the location of the protoplanet candidate.

Birth of a Giant Planet
An image of the sky around HD 100546 created using images from the Digitized Sky Survey 2

According to current theory, giant planets grow by capturing some of the gas and dust that remains after the formation of a star [3]. The astronomers have spotted several features in the new image of the disc around HD100546 that support this protoplanet hypothesis. Structures in the dusty circumstellar disc, which could be caused by interactions between the planet and the disc, were revealed close to the detected protoplanet. Also, there are indications that the surroundings of the protoplanet are potentially heated up by the formation process.

Although the protoplanet is the most likely explanation for the observations, the results of this study require follow-up observations to confirm the existence of the planet and discard other plausible scenarios. Among other explanations, it is possible, although unlikely, that the detected signal could have come from a background source. It is also possible that the newly detected object might not be a protoplanet, but a fully formed planet which was ejected from its original orbit closer to the star. When the new object around HD 100546 is confirmed to be a forming planet embedded in its parent disc of gas and dust, it will become an unique laboratory in which to study the formation process of a new planetary system.

Source: ESO Via: GizMag