Jupiter-like ‘CI Tau b’ orbits 2 million-year-old star in constellation Taurus
HOUSTON
— In contradiction to the long-standing idea that larger
planets take longer to form, U.S. astronomers today announced the discovery of
a giant planet in close orbit around a star so young that it still retains a
disk of circumstellar gas and dust.
“For decades, conventional wisdom
held that large Jupiter-mass planets take a minimum of 10 million years to
form,” said Christopher Johns-Krull, the lead author of a new study about the
planet, CI Tau b, that will be published in The Astrophysical Journal. “That’s
been called into question over the past decade, and many new ideas have been
offered, but the bottom line is that we need to identify a number of newly
formed planets around young stars if we hope to fully understand planet
formation.”
CI Tau b is at least eight times
larger than Jupiter and orbits a 2 million-year-old star about 450 light years
from Earth in the constellation Taurus. Johns-Krull and a dozen co-authors from
Rice, Lowell Observatory, the University of Texas at Austin, NASA and Northern
Arizona University made the peer-reviewed study available
online this week.
Earth and the sun are more than 4
billion years old, and while the 3,300-plus catalog of exoplanets includes some
older and some younger than Earth, the obstacles to finding planets around
newly formed stars are varied and daunting, Johns-Krull said. There are
relatively few candidate stars that are young enough, bright enough to view in
sufficient detail with existing telescopes and still retain circumstellar disks
of gas and dust from which planets form. Stars so young also are often active,
with visual outbursts and dimmings, strong magnetic fields and enormous starspots
that can make it appear that planets exist where they do not.
CI Tau b orbits the star CI Tau once
every nine days. The planet was found with the radial velocity method, a
planet-hunting technique that relies upon slight variations in the velocity of
a star to determine the gravitational pull exerted by nearby planets that are
too faint to observe directly with a telescope. The discovery resulted from a
survey begun in 2004 of 140 candidate stars in the star-forming region
Taurus-Auriga.
“This result is unique because it
demonstrates that a giant planet can form so rapidly that the remnant gas and
dust from which the young star formed, surrounding the system in a Frisbee-like
disk, is still present,” said Lisa Prato of Lowell Observatory, co-leader of
the young planet survey and a co-author on the paper. “Giant planet formation
in the inner part of this disk, where CI Tau b is located, will have a profound
impact on the region where smaller terrestrial planets are also potentially
forming.”
Additional team members were Patrick
Hartigan, Naved Mahmud, Wei Chen, Wilson Cauley and Joshua Jones, all of Rice;
Christopher Crockett and Brian Skiff of Lowell Observatory; Daniel Jaffe, Jacob
McLane and Gregory Mace of the University of Texas at Austin; and Charles
Beichman of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Cauley is currently a
postdoctoral researcher at Wesleyan University, and Crockett now writes for
Science News.
The team observed CI Tau dozens of
times from the University of Texas at Austin’s McDonald Observatory near Fort
Davis, Texas; the Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Ariz.; the NASA Infrared
Telescope Facility and the Keck II telescopes on Mauna Kea, Hawaii; and the
Kitt Peak National Observatory’s 2.1- and 4-meter telescopes in southern
Arizona.
Initial optical radial velocity data
from McDonald Observatory confirmed that a planet might be present, and the
team added photometry measurements from Lowell and five years of infrared
observations from Hawaii, Kitt Peak and McDonald to rule out the possibility
that the optical signal resulted from starspots or another masking phenomenon.
Johns-Krull said the team has
examined about half of the young stars in the Taurus-Auriga survey sample, and
the data from several of these suggest that more planets may be found.
“Ours isn’t the only group looking
for planets around young stars, and my hope is that astronomers can find enough
of them to shed light on some of the nagging questions about planet formation,”
Johns-Krull said. “For instance, the ‘brown dwarf desert,’ an unexplained
paucity of objects that are larger than giant planets but smaller than stars.
If close investigation of young stars reveals more brown dwarfs in short-period
orbits than elsewhere, that could confirm the theory that they tend to merge
with their central stars within a few million years of forming.”
NASA, the National Science Foundation
and the Arizona Space Grant consortium supported the research.
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